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Query: UMLS:C0007097 (
carcinoma
)
152,788
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The expression of the nuclear phosphoprotein
p53
was studied immunohistochemically in a series of 150 benign and malignant colorectal tumors. Using monoclonal antibody PAb1801, tumors divided unequivocally into two groups on the basis of immunohistochemistry. Forty of the carcinomas (46.5%) showed positive staining but only 4 of the adenomas (8.7%) were positive (P less than 0.001). The few positive adenomas always showed moderate or severe dysplasia. Metaplastic polyps (n = 9) and small familial adenomatous polyposis-related adenomas (n = 9) were uniformly negative.
Carcinomas
with
p53
expression did not differ from those without in terms of site, differentiation or the prognostic indicators of Dukes' stage, DNA ploidy, or tumor histology. The improved morphologic resolution available in periodate lysine paraformaldehyde dichromate (PLPD)-fixed, paraffin-embedded tissue permitted several conclusions to be made:
p53
is confined to neoplastic nuclei; staining in positive tumors is heterogeneous and often more marked at the infiltrative margins; and staining intensity is dramatically reduced in mitotic cells. It is concluded that expression of immunohistochemically detectable
p53
(probably representing mutated forms of the protein) occurs in some adenomas around the time of transition to
carcinoma
. Therefore there is an association with the appearance of infiltrative behavior but not with degree of tumor progression (including metastasis) at the time of resection.
...
PMID:p53 expression in colorectal tumors. 170 33
A new technique for characterizing somatic mutations in very small samples of cellularly heterogeneous human cancer tissue was developed and tested using mutations in the
p53
gene in breast carcinomas as a model system. The technique combines touch preparation of specimens to obtain homogeneous clusters of
carcinoma
cells free of normal cells with a nested pair of polymerase chain reaction (PCR) amplifications of DNA to increase the amount of target gene sequence sufficiently to permit direct sequencing of the
p53
gene. Touch preparations of fresh or previously frozen tissue from human adenocarcinomas derived from several organs were stained, and clusters of 10-50 malignant cells were transferred by pipette into microfuge tubes for PCR amplification. Exons 5-9 of the
p53
gene, which contain the major mutational hot spots associated with most human cancers, were sequenced by the following steps: 1) two rounds of PCR amplification using DNA Taq polymerase and two sets of oligonucleotide primers, the second set being nested within the segment amplified by the first set and having attached T7 and SP6 phage promoter sequences, 2) transcription of the amplified DNA sequences with T7 and SP6 RNA polymerases, and 3) dideoxy sequencing of single-stranded RNA transcripts with reverse transcriptase and with additional oligonucleotide primers to achieve specificity for this unique region of the genome. The utility of this approach is illustrated by our success in detecting and analyzing point mutations in cell clusters from four of 11 primary adenocarcinomas of the human breast.
...
PMID:Direct sequencing from touch preparations of human carcinomas: analysis of p53 mutations in breast carcinomas. 207 13
Using three antibodies (JG8, CM-1 and 1081) directed to the
p53 protein
, strong positivity was found in 16/47 (34.0%) of mucosal squamous cell carcinomas of the head and neck and in two squamous
carcinoma
cell lines (LICR-LON- HN5 and HN6Rr). The presence of the mutant p53 was confirmed in the cell lines as substitutions in exon 7 (codon 238, TGT greater than AGT) and exon 5 (codon 152, CCG greater than CTG) respectively. Positive staining was seen only in the undifferentiated cells and progressively lost as the cells keratinized, both in the tumour specimens and in the cell lines. Similar results were seen in areas of dysplasia, well removed from the site of the primary tumour. Staining of epidermal lesions showed positivity in 2/12 (16.6%) cases of Bowen's disease, 0/12 (0.0%) cases of solar keratosis, 0/10 (0.0%) basal cell carcinomas and in 3/20 (15.0%) squamous cell carcinomas. These results are discussed in relation to the multifocal origin of squamous cell carcinomas, the role of
p53
mutations in squamous cell carcinomas from different sites and the significance of the 'basal' distribution of
p53
as a normal growth regulator. The possible significance of the distribution of
p53
in squamous epithelium as it relates to papilloma virus infection is also considered.
...
PMID:Expression of p53 in premalignant and malignant squamous epithelium. 171 23
Recent fundamental research has disclosed the presence of multiple genetic alterations including activation of oncogenes and inactivation of tumor suppressor genes in various human cancers. These multiple genetic alterations are thought to be correlated with multiple stages of carcinogenesis and further progression. Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is a typical example. The majority of HCCs are associated with infection by hepatitis virus B or C. In the damaged liver, small nodular lesions develop due to clonal expansion of hepatocytes. Some of these nodules are diagnosed as early HCC of the well differentiated type and correspond to in situ or microinvasive
carcinoma
. Within these nodules, moderately or poorly differentiated HCCs often emerge as nodule-in-nodule lesions when the diameter of the nodules exceeds 1.5 cm. Ordinary HCCs formed by progression show highly increased cell proliferation, neovascularization, production of high-molecular-mass forms of basic fibroblast growth factor and aneuploidy in some tumors. Corresponding to this stage of malignant progression, HCCs show loss of heterozygosity for multiple chromosomes including chromosomes 4, 16q and 17p. Tumor suppressor gene
p53
, located on 17p, is frequently mutated in high-grade, but not in early, HCCs. Thus, it is strongly suggested that inactivation of multiple tumor suppressor genes plays an important role in progression, and probably directly or indirectly causes chromosome instability, enhanced cell proliferation and neovascularization.
...
PMID:Pathology and molecular mechanisms of multistage human hepatocarcinogenesis. 172 34
Tumors derived from a Li-Fraumeni syndrome cancer-susceptible family were examined for expression of the retinoblastoma susceptibility gene (RB). Whereas RB expression was normal in a primary breast
carcinoma
and its metastases from one member of this family, overexpression of RB was found in an adrenocortical carcinoma from another family member. This was in contrast to normal RB expression in normal tissue of this patient, the adrenocortical adenocarcinoma cell line SW-13, and the fibroblast cell line MRC-5, and low level RB expression in normal adrenal tissue. The overexpression in the adrenocortical carcinoma resulted in increased synthesis of the RB-encoded protein and did not appear to be associated with RB amplification or rearrangement. This result is novel as it is usually the loss of expression or production of an altered RB transcript exhibiting deletions that is associated with carcinogenesis. In light of the recent discovery of
p53
point mutations in the affected Li-Fraumeni syndrome family members tested, RB overexpression may constitute a secondary event in Li-Fraumeni syndrome tumorigenesis.
...
PMID:Overexpression of the retinoblastoma gene in a familial adrenocortical carcinoma. 175 10
In animal systems, complete and permanent eradication of tumours can be achieved by adoptive transfer of MHC-restricted T cells, combined with IL2. In certain types of human cancer (melanoma and perhaps renal cell carcinoma), tumour-specific T cells are probably the therapeutically most active cells among LAK or TIL cells. To prove these points, it is necessary to conduct trials with cloned tumour-specific T cells. Other potentially immunogenic tumors are cervical
carcinoma
, associated with human papilloma virus, and Burkitt's lymphoma, associated with Epstein-Barr virus. Most other human tumours, caused by subtle mutations in proto-oncogenes, are likely to be poorly or non-immunogenic. It is worthwhile trying to overcome this by vaccination with IL2 or IFN gamma-producing tumour cells or by deliberate vaccination with desirable targets for tumour-specific CTL such as the products of point-mutated oncogenes, including ras (Jung and Schleusener, 1991) and
p53
(Rodriguez et al., 1990; Halevy et al., 1990), provided the relevant peptides are processed and bound to MHC class I molecules. Other potential targets are breakpoint peptides of translocated oncogene products such as bcr/abl (Van Denderen et al., 1990). In viral systems, it has already been established that peptide vaccination for protective CTL induction is feasible (Aichele et al., 1989; Schulz et al., 1991; Kast et al., 1991).
...
PMID:T-cell immunotherapy of cancer. 175 15
Programmed cell death is a physiological, energy-consuming mechanism leading to suicide of the cell. Cell death is accomplished by the activation of endonucleases that fragment the cell's nuclear DNA. Some tumour cells remain susceptible to programmed death. These are hormone- and growth factor-dependent tumour cells. Hormone or growth factor deprivation induces signals leading to apoptosis. Other tumours gain strong resistance to apoptosis. One of the normal functions of the bcl-2 gene is to provide longevity to memory B cells. When this gene becomes translocated in follicular B cell lymphomas, it renders lymphoma cells resistant to apoptosis. Latent membrane protein encoded by an EBV gene, either by itself or by amplifying bcl-2, enables tumour cells (nasopharyngeal
carcinoma
; Reed-Sternberg cell of Hodgkin's disease) to resist apoptotic death. Loss of antioncogene
p53
provides for resistance against programmed cell death. Breakdown of resistance to apoptosis in tumour cells can be achieved by oncolytic viruses; generation of lymphotoxin and tumour necrosis factor; monoclonal antibodies; transfection with plasmid vectors carrying
p53
; gamma irradiation; and certain chemotherapeutic agents.
...
PMID:Programmed cell death (apoptosis): its virological and immunological connections (a review). 181 29
Inactivation of tumor suppressor genes is now believed to play an important role in various progression stages of human cancers. To clarify the possible involvement of tumor suppressor gene inactivation in the acquisition of metastatic potential in lung and colorectal
carcinoma
cells, we examined various genetic alterations in both primary tumors and metastases obtained from patients with lung and colorectal carcinomas. In lung carcinoma, loss of heterozygosity on chromosomes 3p, 13q, and 17p is a common genetic alteration, and both RB and
p53
genes are inactivated as a result of chromosome 13q and 17p losses. In some cases, allelic loss on chromosome 11p and amplification of myc family oncogenes occur during tumor progression. In colorectal
carcinoma
,
p53
and DCC alterations were detected in 100% of metastases, and sequential accumulation of allelic losses on chromosomes 13q, 14q, and 18q in the process of metastasis was observed. These results indicate that a subset of tumor suppressor genes is involved in metastasis of lung and colorectal carcinomas.
...
PMID:Tumor suppressor genes involved in metastasis of lung and colorectal carcinomas. 184 53
The E7 protein is one of the principle transforming proteins encoded by human papillomavirus type 16 (HPV16), a virus strongly associated with the development of cervical
carcinoma
. In the present study we show that cotransfection of wild-type human or murine
p53
sequences with E7 and ras markedly reduces transformation in baby rat kidney cells, although no effect of
p53
is seen on the ability of E7 to transform an established mouse line to anchorage independence. In contrast, expression of mutant p53 strongly potentiates the transforming function of E7 and confers marked growth factor independence to cells cotransformed by E7 and ras. These data suggest that E7 and
p53
function in separate yet complementary biochemical pathways.
...
PMID:Modulation of immortalizing properties of human papillomavirus type 16 E7 by p53 expression. 184 4
This report reviewed recent remarkable progresses on the cytomolecular mechanisms in colorectal carcinogenesis. Colorectal carcinoma is a good model for the study of multi-step progression, because we can obtain adenomatous polyps which are considered as a precancerous form. Furthermore, a familial syndrome, which is characterized by numerous adenomas of the colon, is available for linkage analysis. Recently, the
p53
and DCC genes have been identified as candidate tumor suppressor genes on chromosome 17p and 18q respectively. In this paper, we present the multiple genetic alterations in colorectal
carcinoma
, including activation of K-ras gene and inactivation of tumor suppressor gene such as
p53
and DCC genes as well as loss of heterozygosity and approach to the gene responsible for adenomatous polyposis coli by reverse genetics.
...
PMID:[Cytomolecular aspects of colorectal carcinoma]. 184 88
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