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Query: UMLS:C0027651 (tumor)
685,946 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Cells derived from a transplantable mouse adrenal cortical tumor maintain their differentiated function in vitro and secrete steroids in response to ACTH and other stimulatory agents. The cell line has been widely employed for various biochemical investigations but there have been few attempts to correlate this work with morphologic data. This communication describes the electron microscopic appearance of the tumor transplant in vivo and primary cultures derived from it at various intervals after the cells are placed in culture. Tumor cells in vivo bear considerable resemblance to normal adult mouse adrenal cortical cells. Organelles generally considered to be directly involved in steroid biosynthesis (mitochondria, smooth endoplasmic reticulum and lipid droplets) are not drastically altered. Certain modifications of the vasculature and cell membrane, seemingly related to steroidogenesis, are present in both the tumor and normal adrenal cortex. Within 2 days after the tumor cells are introduced to culture, their cytoplasm assumes a more simplified appearance. Smooth endoplasmic reticulum is less conspicuous and free ribosomes and polysomes are very abundant. Mitchondrial inner membranes are reorganized from a saccular arrangement in the cells in vivo into distinct lamellar cristae. The tumor cells now resemble undifferentiated embryonic adrenal cells, or cultured adrenal cells from various mammalian sources which have dedifferentiated in the absence of ACTH. In their morphologically unspecialized state, the normal cells are incapable of functional responses to ACTH. In contrast, the cultured, dedifferentiated tumor cells respond within minutes to this hormone and can demonstrate 5-20 fold increases in their basal steroid output. These data suggest that substantial steroidogenic activity can occur although the characteristic appearance of adrenal mitochondria is absent.
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PMID:The ultrastructure of functional mouse adrenal cortical tumor cells in vitro. 21 37

The mechanism of tumor localization of gallium-67 (67Ga) is not known with certainty, although much information has been derived regarding the biodistribution and subcellular fate of 67Ga in a variety of tumors and other tissues from experimental animals. After intravenous administration, 67Ga is bound to transferrin in the blood, and distributed to liver, lacrimal glands, salivary glands, and soft tissue tumors. Within the cells of the liver and tumors, gallium is found in lysosomes, and rough endoplasmic reticulum. Within these organelles, 67Ga is bound to a variety of macromolecules, including transferrin, ferritin, and a 45,000 molecular weight glycoprotein. Recent studies of tumor cells growing in tissue culture suggest an important role for transferrin in 67Ga tumor uptake. This uptake is mediated by a transferrin specific cellular receptor.
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PMID:Mechanisms of localization of gallium-67 in tumors. 21 49

Eleven benign giant cell tumors of bone were studied in the electron microscope, and the fine structural localization of acid phosphatase was elucidated. Three distinct cell types are always present in these tumors: stromal cells type 1; stromal cells type 2; and multinucleated giant cells. Small mononuclear cells may also occur, but are not likely to be actively participating in the neoplastic process. The range of variability in the fine structure of the different cell types constituting this tumor has been established. Variations in appearances include: a) presence of nuclear pseudoinclusions in stromal cells type 1 and multinucleated giant cells; b) aberrations in the structure of the rough surfaced endoplasmic reticulum in the same cell types; c) occurrence of ruffled borders, ectoplasmic layers and cytoplasmic labyrinths containing acid phosphatase in the giant cells. Some giant cells show evidence of marked phagocytic activity and contain large and numerous residual bodies carrying acid phosphatase. The significance of the interrelations between the different cell types are discussed and the possible role of stromal cells type 2 in immunological mechanisms directed against the tumor cells are mentioned.
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PMID:Giant cell tumor of bone. Variations in patterns of appearance of different cell types. 21 36

A brief review of the origin and tumor-inducing properties of Abelson murine leukemia virus is given. The most common neoplasm induced by this virus in vivo is a nonthymic lymphocytic tumor of bone marrow and lymph node origin. Two morphologic types of lymphosarcomas are the undifferentiated lymphosarcoma (LS) and the plasmacytic lymphosarcoma (PL). With the electron microscope, both tumor cell types may be mixed and contain undifferentiated cells or cells with a moderate amount of rough endoplasmic reticulum and polysomes. PL tumors are composed predominantly of the latter. In biosynthetic studies, PL tumors produce more immunoglobulin (Ig) than LS and more of the Ig-heavy chain, which is thought to be the murine counterpart of IgD. PL-cells sensitized with rabbit antisera to mouse kappa chains formed rosettes with formalinized protein-A producing Staphylococcus aureus Cowan I strain. The rabbit antisera were specific for kappa chains by absorption. The failure of lymphosarcoma cells to secrete Ig indicates their differentiation is blocked by the transformation process. Lymphosarcoma cells appear then to be derived from B-lymphocytes.
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PMID:Immunoglobulin production by lymphosarcomas induced by Abelson virus in mice. 21 59

Since the introduction of oral contraceptive steroids in 1960 there has been a sharp increase in the incidence of benign liver tumors. Epidemiologic and other evidence links focal nodular hyperplasia and hepatic cell adenoma to the use of these agents. The risk increases with long-term exposure. The majority of patients were less than 35 years old. Most patients were exposed to mestranol (ME) alone or alternately with ethinylestradiol, both synthetic steroidal estrogens. Inability to demethylate ME in the smooth endoplasmic reticulum of hepatocytes may allow massive accumulation of oncogenic metabolites. This is probably a pharmacogenetic variable in a small number of women. Cholestasis, hypervascularity, induction of intracellular enzyme systems, thrombogenesis, and thickening of arterial and venous walls are other known effects of synthetic estrogens and progestogens. All may contribute to the pathogenesis of liver tumors. Many patients are asymptomatic until there is rapid expansion of the tumor. Pain occurs when Glisson's capsule stretches. Intrahepatic bleeding and liver rupture are common sequelae. Ligation of the hepatic artery may be lifesaving in the face of exsanguinating liver bleeding. Reports of regression with observation alone are encouraging. Instances of progression of unresected adenomas to rupture during subsequent pregnancy dictate avoidance of sex steroids in patients with hepatic neoplasia. Sonography, computerized axial tomography, radionuclide scans, and selective celiohepatic angiography are useful methods for the diagnosis of liver tumor in the symptomatic patient. There is a primary need to develop biochemical methods for detecting patients at risk for developing liver tumors. Epidemiologic research and central reporting of case histories are needed in the search for common factors.
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PMID:Role of oral contraceptive agents in the pathogenesis of liver tumors. 22 97

Two malignant fibrous histiocytomas arising primarily in the lung are described. The first was a large tumor of the right lower lobe in a 53-year-old man. The other tumor was found incidentally on routine roentgenograms in a 25-year-old woman and involved the left main pulmonary artery. The lesions could be resected but both patients developed early cerebral metastases. The neoplasms were predominantly fibroblastic, had a characteristic storiform pattern, and included large histiocytes with bizarre nuclei and a vacuolated cytoplasm. The ultrastructure of the cells in the fibroblastic areas was characterized by irregular nuclei and a cytoplasm with a well-developed endoplasmic reticulum and dilated cisternae. Some cells lacked the prominent endoplasmic reticulum of fibroblasts and others were characteristic histiocytes with numerous cytoplasmic lysosomes. The cases appear to be the first reported primary malignant fibrous histiocytomas of the lung.
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PMID:Malignant fibrous histiocytoma of the lung. 22 78

Malignant fibrous histiocytomas are well-described tumors of the soft tissues. Recent investigations have shown that malignant histiocytoma may also occur as a primary bone tumor. However, difficulties may arise to distinguish malignant histiocytoma of bone from other malignant bone tumors, such as osteosarcoma. In the present study, the ultrastructure of five cases of malignant fibrous histiocytoma of bone is compared with that of osteosarcoma. The results show that malignant fibrous histiocytoma is composed mainly of histiocytic cells and fibroblastic cells. In addition, xanthomatous cells, undifferentiated cells, and giant cells may be observed. By contrast, the predominant cell type in osteosarcoma is the neoplastic osteoblast, characterized by abundant rough endoplasmic reticulum. Signs of matrix calcification in the intercellular matrix between the collagen fibrils are regularly observed in osteosarcoma, but not in malignant histiocytoma. From these results it is concluded that the ultrastructure of malignant fibrous histiocytoma arising in bone is morphologically identical with the soft tissue counterpart of this tumor. The components of the tumor are derived from neoplastic histiocytes. This cytogenesis differs from that of osteosarcoma, which is derived from neoplastic osteoblasts. Therefore, from the ultrastructural point of view, malignant fibrous histiocytoma of bone should be accepted as a distinct histologic entity among bone tumors.
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PMID:Malignant fibrous histiocytoma of bone and osteosarcoma. A comparative light and electron microscopic study. 22 75

Extracellular acidosis (ph 5.9 to 6.5) was found to be significantly retard the subcellular response of Ehrlich ascites tumor cells (EATC) to anoxic injury. The cells initially showed a reversible stage of cell injury with diffuse mitrochondrial condensation and swelling of endoplasmic reticulum (ER) at pH 7.9 by 1 h, while by 3 h at this pH all cells showed high amplitude and intramatrical flocculent densities of mitochondria, and fragmentation of membrane systems. At pH 7.4 cells were normal at 15 min., the mitochondria were condensed as above by 1 h, some cells still showed condensed mitochondria and dilated ER while others showed high amplitude swelling of mitochondria by 3 h and all cells showed irreversible changes by 4 h. At pH 5.9 to pH 6.5 mitochondria remained condensed until 3 h and only by 6 h did some cells show high amplitude swelling, whereas most cells showed persistent mitrochondrial condensation. Not until 8 h did all cells show high amplitude swelling of mitochondria. Furthermore, ultrastructural differences in the pattern of necrosis were seen at the lower pH values consisting of greater density of the cell sap, irregularly dispersed flocculent densities in apposition to fragmented cytoplasmic membranes and in mitochondria, and more prominent persistent clumping of nuclear chromatin.
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PMID:Studies on the modification of the cellular response to injury. II. Electron microscopic studies on the protective effect of acidosis on anoxic injury of Ehrlich ascites tumor cells. 23 33

Fifteen spontaneous immunocytomas originating in the ileocecal lymph nodes of Lou/C/Wsl rats were studied by means of electron microscopy. The histology was characteristic, the tumor being formed by an accumulation of large, rounded cells with slightly eccentric ovoid nuclei, large nucleoli, and finely condensed chromatin along the nuclear walls; the cytoplasma was rich in polyribosomes. The appearance of the rough endoplasmic reticulum was apparently the same whether or not the tumor was secretory. Its development varied from one cell to another, and in only a small proportion of cells did it attain any considerable volume. In all the tumors examined, we noted the presence of intracisternal A-particles. In its morphology, the rat immunocytoma resembled the plasmacytomas induced in mice, and it also resembled certain human tumors such as Burkitt's lymphoma.
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PMID:Rat ileocecal immunocytoma. An ultrastructural study with special attention to the presence of viral particles. 27 32

The properties of spontaneous cutaneous erythrophoromas that occurred in 17 adult goldfish (Carassius auratus) were described. This study was based on combined histology, cytochemistry, electron microscopy, and biochemical analysis. Tumors that varied from 0.4 to 2.7 cm in maximum diameter were located on various parts of the skin. As shown by light microscopy, tumors were composed of red- to orange-pigmented, dendritic, stellate, or spindle-shaped cells, which coalesced into an excrescence in the dermal layer. No metastasis was observed. Evidence of invasiveness in five examples and local recurrence in three examples indicated that some of these tumors were malignant. Electron microscopy revealed numerous round cytoplasmic organelles (pterinosomes), which measured 0.4--0.7 mu, and well-developed tubular, smooth endoplasmic reticulum in the tumor cells. Biochemical analysis showed that red pigmentation of tumor cells was imparted by pteridines and carotenoids, most of which were detectable in normal adult erythrophores. These data indicate that tumors were comprised of neoplastic erythrophores.
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PMID:Morphologic and biochemical characterization of erythrophoromas in goldfish (Carassius auratus). 28 53


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