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Query: UMLS:C0178874 (
tumor progression
)
40,807
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The presence of t(11;22)(q24;q12) is often considered diagnostic of Ewing sarcoma and peripheral primitive neuroectodermal tumor (pPNET). We report a case of a polyphenotypic tumor that possessed this translocation as detected by reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR). This tumor was positive for vimentin, desmin, low-molecular-weight
keratin
, neuron-specific enolase, S-100 protein, and CD57 by immunohistochemistry. Of note, the tumor was negative for MIC2. The tumor had double-minute chromosomes with > 100 copies of the MDM2 gene. Thus, the presence of the t(11;22)(q24;q12) translocation should not be considered diagnostic of Ewing sarcoma and pPNET in the absence of supporting histologic evidence such as positive staining for MIC2. The presence of this translocation in Ewing sarcoma and pPNET has been taken as evidence that these two tumors are related. Rather than extending this relationship to include some polyphenotypic tumors, other tumors may acquire this genetic change during
tumor progression
. Treatment regimens for tumors may be better based on phenotype rather than genotype when these two profiles are seemingly in conflict.
...
PMID:Intra-abdominal polyphenotypic tumor. 896 28
Epithelial ovarian carcinomas originate in the ovarian surface epithelium (OSE). In culture, OSE undergoes epithelio-mesenchymal conversion, an event mimicking a wound response, while ovarian carcinomas retain complex epithelial characteristics. To define the onset of this increased epithelial autonomy in ovarian
neoplastic progression
, we examined mesenchymal conversion in OSE from 25 women with no family histories (NFH-OSE) and 13 women with family histories (FH-OSE) of breast/ovarian cancer (including 8 with mutated BRCA1 or 17q linkage) and in 8 ovarian cancer lines. After 3-6 passages in monolayer culture, most NFH-OSE exhibited reduced
keratin
expression and high collagen type III expression. In contrast,
keratin
remained high but collagen expression was lower in p. 3-6 FH-OSE. This difference was lost in SV40-transformed lines, which all resembled FH-OSE. Most carcinoma lines remained epithelial and did not undergo mesenchymal conversion. In 3-dimensional (3-D) sponge culture, NFH-OSE cells dispersed and secreted abundant extracellular matrix (ECM). FH-OSE remained epithelial and did not secrete ECM. ECM production was also reduced in SV40-transformed lines. Carcinoma lines in 3-D formed epithelial cysts, aggregates and papillae and lacked ECM. Sponge contraction (a mesenchymal characteristic) was greater in NFH-OSE than in FH-OSE both before and after SV40 transformation and was absent in the cancer lines. Our results suggest that increased autonomy of epithelial characteristics is an early indicator of ovarian
neoplastic progression
and that phenotypic changes indicative of such autonomy are found already in overtly normal OSE from women with histories of familial breast/ovarian cancer.
...
PMID:Autonomy of the epithelial phenotype in human ovarian surface epithelium: changes with neoplastic progression and with a family history of ovarian cancer. 898 Feb 41
Keratin 19 is an intermediate filament protein produced by cells of simple epithelia and basal cells of stratified epithelia of different organs. These cell types are associated with important human cancers. We have used the keratin 19 promoter to target the expression of the polyomavirus (Py) large T-antigen, an immortalizing oncogene known to bind to the tumor suppressor retinoblastoma gene product, to epithelial cells. Individuals of the transgenic mouse line K19PyLT-6 developed one or two nodules in one of their lungs. By histology, the nodules were papillary tumors that consisted of nonciliated epithelial cells of the terminal bronchioles. In addition, infiltrates emanating from the nodules were consistent with the development of pulmonary adenocarcinomas. In situ hybridization techniques demonstrated large T-antigen expression in the tumors. Primary cultures were established from a lung tumor dissected from a K19PyLT-6 transgenic mouse. These large T-antigen-expressing cell lines produced the
keratin
proteins reminiscent of the epithelial origin of the lung tumor. However, further molecular studies indicated that these cell lines did not express Clara cells or pneumocytes markers. s.c. injection of the cell lines into nontransgenic syngeneic mice produced tumors in 2 weeks that resembled malignant pulmonary adenocarcinomas. These animals, which display
tumor progression
in situ, and the cell lines derived thereof provide a useful system for the study of lung tumorigenesis.
...
PMID:Transgenic mice bearing the polyomavirus large T antigen directed by 2.1 kb of the keratin 19 promoter develop bronchiolar papillary tumors with progression to lung adenocarcinomas. 901 64
The expression of intermediate filament proteins is remarkably tissue-specific which suggests that the intermediate filament (IF) type(s) present in cells is somehow related to their biological function. However, in some cancers-particularly malignant melanoma and breast carcinoma, there is a strong indication that vimentin and
keratin
IFs are coexpressed, thus presenting as a dedifferentiated or interconverted (between epithelial and mesenchymal) phenotype. In this review, two in vitro models are presented which recapitulate the interconverted phenotype in human melanoma and breast carcinoma, and allow, for the first time, unique observations to be made with respect to the role of IFs in
cancer progression
. These studies have provided direct evidence linking overexpression of
keratin
IFs in human melanoma with increased migratory and invasive activity in vitro, which can be down-regulated by substituting dominant-negative
keratin
mutants. Overexpression of vimentin IFs in the breast carcinoma model leads to augmentation of motility and invasiveness in vitro, which can be transiently down-regulated by treatment with antisense oligonucleotides to vimentin. Additional experimental evidence suggests that the mechanism(s) responsible for the differential expression of metastatic properties associated with the interconverted phenotype rest(s) in the unique interaction, either direct or indirect, of IFs with specific integrins interacting with the extracellular matrix. In this review, we discuss the observations derived from the human melanoma and breast carcinoma models to address the hypothesis that the ability to coexpress vimentin and keratins confers a selective advantage to tumor cells in their interpretation of and response to signaling cues from the extracellular matrix. The ramifications of these observations are discussed with respect to the patholophysiology of the respective in situ tumors.
...
PMID:Role of intermediate filaments in migration, invasion and metastasis. 903 7
Infection of the human cervix with certain papillomavirus subtypes is associated with the development of neoplastic squamous lesions that can progress to overt cervical malignancies. Recently, multistage squamous carcinogenesis has been achieved in K14-HPV16 transgenic mice, wherein expression of the human papillomavirus (HPV) type 16 early genes is targeted to basal squamous epithelial cells by regulatory elements of the human
keratin
-14 (K14) promoter. Immunostaining of the endothelial marker vWf revealed a parallel upregulation of angiogenesis during the early neoplastic stages in both human cervix and the epidermis of K14-HPV16 transgenic mice. Moreover, high-grade premalignant lesions and cancers in humans and transgenic mice were characterized by an additional increment in the number of new capillaries and close apposition of the microvasculature to the overlying neoplastic epithelium. Expression of the potent angiogenic factor VEGF was progressively up-regulated during carcinogenesis in both species, correlating with the increased density and altered distribution of the microvasculature. Thus, angiogenesis occurs during the premalignant stages of squamous carcinogenesis in both human cervical disease and a relevant transgenic model and may be controlled by similar molecular mechanisms in both species. These results validate the use of the transgenic model to elucidate the role of angiogenesis during HPV-associated
neoplastic progression
.
...
PMID:Cross-species comparison of angiogenesis during the premalignant stages of squamous carcinogenesis in the human cervix and K14-HPV16 transgenic mice. 910 16
CaN19, a member of the S100 family of calcium-binding proteins, is known to be "underexpressed" in cultured breast carcinoma-derived cell lines relative to their normal counterparts. By Northern blotting, we confirm these results and find that CaN19 is also markedly "underexpressed" in several carcinoma-derived cell lines of the skin, oral mucosa, and urogenital tract. However, exceptions to the inverse correlation between CaN19 expression and malignancy have been identified, bringing into question the hypothesis that CaN19 functions as a tumor suppressor gene. Unexpectedly, CaN19 mRNA was strongly expressed in bulk specimens of basal and squamous cell carcinomas of the skin and oral cavity. However, in situ hybridization revealed only limited CaN19 expression in tumor cells themselves; the bulk of expression is localized to hyperplastic perilesional epidermis. Tumor cell expression of CaN19 was similar in primary and locally metastatic tumors, indicating that this gene is not necessarily down-regulated during
tumor progression
. Coordinate overexpression of CaN19 and the "hyperproliferalive"
keratin
K6a was observed only in tissues undergoing squamous differentiation. Taken together with other recent results from our laboratory, these findings suggest the hypothesis that CaN19 participates in an epidermal growth factor receptor-dependent pathway of regenerative squamous differentiation.
...
PMID:CaN19 expression in benign and malignant hyperplasias of the skin and oral mucosa: evidence for a role in regenerative differentiation. 923 Feb 22
The
keratin
cytoskeleton is formed in different epidermal compartments by distinct polypeptides. Basal, proliferative keratinocytes express
keratin
(K) 5 and K14, whereas, suprabasal, post-mitotic keratinocytes express K1 and K10. Changes in this
keratin
pattern have been found to occur in hyperproliferative skin disorders and, in particular, throughout mouse epidermal carcinogenesis. Whereas some keratins not found in normal epidermis (K6, K16, K13, and K8) are induced at different stages of tumor development, K1 and K10 expression is lost. To determine whether K1 and K10 loss is just a consequence of the altered differentiation program or an event required for
tumor progression
, we generated transgenic mice carrying the human keratin 10 gene (hK10) under the control of a bovine
keratin
6 gene regulatory region, which is silent in normal skin but is induced and drives transgene expression in hyperproliferative skin keratinocytes and, therefore, in skin tumors. Transgenic animals subjected to a complete carcinogenesis protocol developed tumors that contained various amounts of transgenic hK10. Although no significant difference was found in tumor number or malignancy, tumor onset was significantly delayed in transgenic mice, indicating that the presence of K10 actually impairs tumor development.
...
PMID:Delays in malignant tumor development in transgenic mice by forced epidermal keratin 10 expression in mouse skin carcinomas. 932 31
An 82-year-old man with microhematuria and class V cells in his urinary cytologic specimen was referred to our clinic. Cystoscopy revealed a solid, broad-based tumor of 1 cm in diameter in the bladder diverticulum. A partial cystectomy was performed. The tumor was composed of transitional cell carcinoma (TCC), sarcomatous spindle cells and the area of transition between TCC and spindle cells. The histopathological diagnosis was sarcomatoid carcinoma. Immunohistochemical examination showed that the spindle cells and the area of transition were positive for
keratin
, cytokeratin, vimentin and muscle actin. The histopathological and immunohistochemical transitions between the TCC and the spindle cells suggested that the sarcomatous elements originated from the TCC during
tumor progression
.
...
PMID:[A case of sarcomatoid carcinoma of the bladder: immunohistochemical study on histogenesis of sarcomatoid elements]. 936 50
We report the cytogenetic, fluorescence in-situ hybridization (FISH) and DNA flow cytometric analysis of a rare metastatic epimyoepithelial carcinoma of the parotid gland to the lung with a clinical course of 29 years. DNA content and FISH analyses of tumor and short-term culture cells showed diploid DNA content and lack of numerical chromosomal abnormalities. Immunohistochemical analysis of the short-term culture cells showed predominantly
keratin
positive and sparse desmin staining supporting an epithelial rather than myoepithelial origin. Cytogenetic analysis showed 46,XY karyotype with clonal translocations of t(3;22)(q13.2;q13.1), t(1;7)(q21;q22), t(8;9)(p10;p10), and t(5;6) (q35;q21). Our findings indicate that these alterations developed in a diploid stemline during
tumor progression
and in the epithelial component of this tumor.
...
PMID:Multiple unrelated translocations in a metastatic epimyoepithelial carcinoma of the parotid gland. 942 61
The histological changes of lichen sclerosus (LS) are frequently found in association with vulvar squamous cell carcinoma (SCC). The importance of chronic inflammation and scarring in oncogenesis is well recognized. Thirty-two patients with symptomatic vulvar LS and 60 with vulvar SCC were studied. Paraffin sections of vulvar LS, and three controls groups (acute scars, normal vulva, and vulvar lichen simplex chronicus [LSC]) were investigated with a panel of seven tissue markers and for DNA content in areas without vulvar intraepithelial neoplasia (VIN). All published cases to date of vulvar LS associated with SCC were reviewed. Of the cohort of symptomatic vulvar LS patients (mean/median age, 60 years), 9% developed VIN lesions and 21% invasive SCC; symptomatic LS preceded the carcinoma by a mean of 4 years (range, 1 to 23 years). Second and third primary tumors developed in three of these patients. Of the series of 60 patients presenting with vulvar SCCa, the clinical setting and histological features of SCCs associated with LS were significantly distinctive compared with SCCas without LS: SCCs associated with LS occurred in an older age-group (74 v 65 years; P = .01), were located on the clitoris (41% v 5%; P = .003), were of conventional SCCa type (85% v 57%; P = .02), were associated with a prominent fibromyxoid stromal response (46% v 10%; P = .004), were not associated with VIN 3 (SCC in situ) (5% v 67%; P = .02) and diffusely expressed tumor suppressor gene product p53 (43% v 19%; P = .01) and cytokine TGF-beta (33% v 9%; P = .05). The epidermis of vulvar LS was similar to that of acute scars and differed significantly compared with normal vulva with respect to keratinocytic expression of markers to
keratin
AE 1, involucrin and filaggrin, epidermal thickness (0.13 mm [LS] v 0.05 mm [normal]; P < .03), and proliferative index by PCNA and Mib-1 labeling (53/60 [LS] v 15/19 [normal] per 200 basal cells [bc]; P < .003). Vulvar LS showed significantly higher expression of p53 than all three control groups (80 [LS] v 3 [normal]/44 [acute scar]/28 [LSC] per 200 bc; P < .008), and aneuploidy (33% v diploid controls) in the absence of VIN. Comparing LS with and without associated SCCa found significant increases in age of patients (74 v 66 years; P = .001), and DNA aneuploidy (52% v 11%; P = .0001) and no differences in epidermal thickness, sclerotic thickness, proliferative index, or p53 expression. However, those cases of LS with an aneuploid DNA content showed significantly elevated p53 expression (88 v 60/200 bc; P = .01) and epidermal thickness (0.16 v 0.11 mm; P = .005) compared with LS with a diploid DNA content. Review of published cases supports an association between LS and vulvar SCC. The phenomenon of chronic inflammation and scarring giving rise to carcinoma has been well documented. Vulvar lichen sclerosus (LS) is an inflammatory dermatosis characterized by clinicopathologic persistence and hypocellular fibrosis (sclerosis). A subset of vulvar SCCs is significantly associated with the presence of LS and diffusely express the p53 gene product. Keratinocytes affected by LS show a proliferative phenotype and can exhibit markers of
neoplastic progression
such as increased p53 expression and DNA aneuploidy. As a chronic scarring inflammatory dermatosis, vulvar LS could act as both "initiator and promoter" of carcinogenesis, explaining the frequent coexistence of these diseases. Because keratinocytes of LS significantly express tumor suppressor gene p53 protein, the p53 gene may be involved early in this proposed pathway of carcinogenesis.
...
PMID:Vulvar lichen sclerosus and squamous cell carcinoma: a cohort, case control, and investigational study with historical perspective; implications for chronic inflammation and sclerosis in the development of neoplasia. 974 9
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