Gene/Protein
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Symptom
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Gene/Protein
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Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
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Query: UMLS:C0268596 (
EMA
)
2,520
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Extracranial spread of neuroectodermal tumors is an unusual event, most frequently expected from glioblastomas and medulloblastomas. Single cases of metastatic oligodendrogliomas have been described, but no genetic data are reported. Oligodendrogliomas are characterized by distinct genetic alterations, i.e. loss of heterozygosity (LOH) of 1p and 19q; therefore, molecular genetic analysis of metastatic cases is of considerable interest. It may be instrumental in defining the distant tumor as metastatic oligodendroglioma and give clues to the genetic events associated with the highly malignant transformation. We present the case of a patient with multiple bone metastases from a cerebral oligodendroglioma. Oligodendroglioma grade II was the diagnosis both at original and second operation, performed 7 and 1 years before the extracranial dissemination. The extraneural spread presented before the local intracranial recurrence. The patient received procarbazine, lomustine, vincristine chemotherapy and radiotherapy after the second surgery. The computed tomography-guided biopsy of the bone lesions revealed tumor cells positive for GFAP, S-100 and Leu-7 and negative for cytokeratin, LCA and
EMA
. The genetic analysis of DNA from the original tumor, the bone metastasis and the autoptic brain tumor showed LOH of 1p; heterozygous deletion of CDKN2A/p 16 was detected as additional alteration in the metastasis and in the intracranial tumor at autopsy.
TP53
, MDM2 and CDKN2A/p14ARF genes were unchanged. Repeated brain surgery and extended survival may have acted as promoter of extraneural dissemination. Loss of CDKN2A most probably played an important role in the malignant progression: its involvement in metastatic potential remains to be clarified. Our data confirm that malignant transformation of oliogodendrogliomas may be undetected by histology and underscore the importance of genetic analysis. Coincidentally with intensive anticancer therapy, chemotherapy included, employed in patients with oligodendroglioma and the ensuing long survival, the frequency of metastatic oliogodendrogliomas may increase.
...
PMID:Molecular genetic study of a metastatic oligodendroglioma. 1501 56
In the literature, sufficient attention has not been paid to the precise subcellular localization of immunohistochemical signals, the knowledge of which is essential for proper interpretation of immunostains and distinction of genuine staining from biotin-associated or other nonspecific stainings. The subcellular localization of the signals can in fact be easily deduced from the known biologic or ultrastructural characteristics of the antigens. Extracellular antigens obviously are located in the extracellular compartment. Cellular antigens fall into 3 major groups: membranous, nuclear, and cytoplasmic. Membranous antigens include cell adhesion molecules (such as E-cadherin, N-CAM), cell surface/transmembrane receptors and proteins (such as tyrosine kinase receptors, most leukocyte antigens, CD10, CEA), and molecules linking surface molecules to cytoskeleton (such as beta-catenin, dystrophin). Nuclear antigens include cell cycle-associated proteins (such as cyclins, p16, Ki-67), nuclear enzymes (such as TdT), transcription factors (such as TTF-1, CDX-2, myogenin, PAX-5), tumor suppressor gene products (such as
p53
, p63, WT1, Rb), steroid hormone receptors (such as ER, PR), calcium-binding proteins (such as S-100 protein, calretinin), and some viral proteins (such as CMV, herpes). Cytoplasmic antigens can take up a granular pattern due to localization in organelles, granules, or secretory vesicles (such as chromogranin, hormones, lysozyme, HMB-45), fibrillary pattern attributable to the filamentous nature of the molecules (intermediate filaments and microfilaments), or diffuse or patchy pattern due to localization in the cytosol or large vesicles (such as myoglobin, albumin, thyroglobulin). Aberrant localization of the molecules, when present, can provide important insight into disease processes and aid in their diagnosis, such as loss of membranous E-cadherin expression in lobular breast carcinoma, aberrant nuclear localization of beta-catenin in colorectal adenocarcinoma, pattern of ALK staining in anaplastic large cell lymphoma correlating with the different types of chromosomal translocations, presence of additional cytoplasmic CD10 staining in the enterocytes indicative of microvillous inclusion disease, and "reversed" staining for
EMA
in micropapillary mammary carcinoma.
...
PMID:Subcellular localization of immunohistochemical signals: knowledge of the ultrastructural or biologic features of the antigens helps predict the signal localization and proper interpretation of immunostains. 1530 32
Rare examples of high-grade gliomas show focal epithelial differentiation, which may require distinction from colliision tumors. These epithelial constituents are not well-characterized immunophenotypically and have rarely been subjected to genotyping. We describe a case of a 54-year-old female with a short history of hemiparesis who was found to have an absolute lymphocytosis and a heterogeneously enhancing frontotemporal tumor. Cytological and histological examination of brain biopsies confirmed the presence of a glioblastoma multiforme also containing CAM5.2/CK7/BerEP4/CEA/
EMA
-immunopositive and GFAP-immunonegative nests of epithelial cells with a high proliferative index and focal glandular differentiation. Hematological investigations confirmed a diagn of chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) with no demonstrable CNS involvement. Genetic analysis using microsatellite markers and specimens obtained by laser capture microdissection of the CNS tumor and normal brain tissue, showed that both the glial and epithelial components of the brain tumor had identical losses of 2/2 informative markers on chromosome 17p13 and 5/5 informative markers on chromosome 10q22-26. The glial and epithelial components also shared an identical 2 base pair deletion in the
TP53
gene at codon 209, exon 6, introducing a stop codon at codon 214. No losses at any of the above loci and no
TP53
mutation were detected in the leukemic cells. These results suggest both components of the brain tumor, although differing in phenotype, share the same genetic lineage.
...
PMID:Phenotypic and genotypic characterization of glioblastoma multiforme with epithelial differentiation and adenoid formations. 1532 77
Ovarian small cell carcinoma of hypercalcemic type (OSCCHT) is a rare neoplasm with an aggressive behavior, broad differential diagnosis, and unknown histogenesis. To add to knowledge concerning the possible aid of immunohistochemistry in resolving problems in differential diagnosis and to further explore whether that modality points to any specific histogenesis, we undertook an immunohistochemical study of this neoplasm. Fifteen OSCCHTs (including four of the ''large cell" variant) were stained with a range of antibodies, some of which have not been investigated previously in this neoplasm. Cases were stained with AE1/3,
EMA
, BerEP4, CK5/6, calretinin, WT1, chromogranin, CD56, synaptophysin, CD99, NB84, desmin, S100, CD10, alpha inhibin, TTFI, and
p53
. Staining was classified as 0 (negative), 1+ (<5% cells positive), 2+ (5% to 25% cells positive), 3+ (26% to 50% cells positive), or 4+ (>50% cells positive). All cases were positive with
p53
(two 1+, five 3+, eight 4+), 14 of 15 cases were positive with WT1 (one 1+, thirteen 4+), 14 of 15 with CD10 (three 1+, four 2+, two 3+, five 4+), 13 of 15 with
EMA
(three 1+, three 2+, two 3+, five 4+), 11 of 15 with calretinin (nine 1+, one 3+, one 4+), 9 of 15 with AE1/3 (eight 1+, one 2+), 4 of 15 with CD56 (one 1+, two 2+, one 4+), 3 of 15 with BerEP4 (two 2+, one 4+), 2 of 15 with synaptophysin (two 1+), and 1 of 15 with S100 (4+). All cases were negative with CK5/6, chromogranin, CD99, NB84, desmin, alpha inhibin, and TTF1. The only noticeable difference in the immunophenotype between typical OSCCHT and the large cell variant was that there was 4 +EMA positivity in three of four cases of large cell variant compared with two of 11 cases of typical OSCCHT. OSCCHT is characteristically positive with AE1/3,
EMA
, CD10, calretinin, WT1, and
p53
. Combined
EMA
and WT1 positivity, the latter usually intense and diffuse, may be of diagnostic value, inasmuch as only a few of the neoplasms in the differential diagnosis are positive with both antibodies. Negative staining with CD99, desmin, NB84, alpha-inhibin, and TTF1 may aid in the cases in which primitive neuroectodermal tumor, rhabdomyosarcoma, intraabdominal desmoplastic small round cell tumor, neuroblastoma, a sex cord-stromal tumor, and metastatic pulmonary small cell carcinoma are in the differential. Calretinin positivity precludes its use in the differential with granulosa cell tumors. The results of this investigation do not settle the issue of histogenesis, which remains enigmatic. The typical age distribution, follicle formation, and calretinin positivity are consistent with a sex cord origin. On the other hand, WT1 and
EMA
positivity and negative staining with alpha-inhibin would be unusual in a sex cord-stromal neoplasm and can be used as an argument for a surface epithelial origin. Germ cell and neuroendocrine origins seem highly unlikely.
...
PMID:An immunohistochemical analysis of ovarian small cell carcinoma of hypercalcemic type. 1538 2
Sarcomatoid carcinomas are uncommon, high-grade tumors, predominantly composed of spindle cells. Only a few cases arising in the penis have been reported. The aim of this study is to better define the clinicopathologic features of this neoplasm. A total of 400 cases of squamous cell carcinoma of the penis were reviewed from which 15 sarcomatoid carcinomas (4%) were identified. Clinical and pathologic features were evaluated in all cases. Immunohistochemical studies for expression of AE1/AE3, Cam 5.2, 34betaE12,
EMA
, vimentin, muscle specific actin, smooth muscle actin, desmin, S-100, p63, and
p53
and in situ hybridization studies for HPV were performed in 5 cases. Information about lymph node status was available in 9 cases, and follow-up in 5 cases. The mean age was 59 years, and mean tumor size was 5 cm. Grossly, most tumors were large, polypoid, and ulcerated masses frequently affecting the glans (93%) and deeply invading corpora cavernosa (80%) and skin. Microscopically, the lesions were predominantly composed of atypical spindle cells disposed in interlacing fascicles, resembling fibrosarcoma or leiomyosarcoma, sometimes admixed with pleomorphic giant cells mimicking malignant fibrous histiocytoma. One case was predominantly composed of myxoid areas. Less frequent and focal patterns were pseudoangiomatous and epithelioid. Mitotic figures were numerous, and necrosis was prominent. Foci of heterologous differentiation toward bone (osteosarcomatous component) were present in 1 case. Four cases showed a minor mixed component of usual, papillary, verrucous, and basaloid carcinoma. Intrapenile metastasis ("satellitosis") was present in 4 tumors. One of the cases was multicentric with a separate independent focus of well-differentiated carcinoma with pseudohyperplastic features. Associated low- and high-grade squamous intraepithelial lesions were noted in 73% of the cases. Immunohistochemical studies and HPV in situ hybridization were done in 5 cases. The spindle cells were diffusely positive for vimentin and
p53
and showed at least intermediate expression of 34betaE12 and p63 in all cases.
EMA
and AE1/AE3 were focally positive in 60% of the cases, and Cam 5.2 was focally positive in 1 case. Tumor cells failed to express muscle specific actin, smooth muscle actin, desmin, and S-100. HPV in situ hybridization was negative in all cases. Inguinal metastases were present in 89% of the cases. Two of five patients with adequate follow-up died of disease within 8 months of the diagnoses. In conclusion, penile sarcomatoid carcinomas are unusual, large, and aggressive tumors usually associated with lymph node metastasis and poor outcome. Differential diagnoses include sarcoma and melanoma. Cytokeratin 34betaE12 and p63 appear to be the more specific and sensitive markers to categorize these tumors as epithelial. Diffuse immunoreactivity for
p53
, compared with a more basal and focal reactivity in differentiated squamous cell carcinoma, may be indicative of a late mutation in the natural progression of the disease.
...
PMID:Sarcomatoid carcinoma of the penis: a clinicopathologic study of 15 cases. 1609 3
Osteoclast-like giant-cell neoplasms of the urinary tract are rare. They are composed of ovoid or spindle-shaped mononuclear cells with evenly spaced osteoclast-like giant cells. Terminology, histogenesis, and biologic behavior of these tumors remain controversial. Six cases of osteoclast-like giant-cell neoplasms of the urinary tract were identified from the consultation files of two of the authors. Patients were all male and elderly (range 65-82), with the exception of one 39-year-old male. In all, 3/6 tumors developed in the bladder and 3/6 in the renal pelvis. Size ranged from 5 to 11 cm. One bladder and three renal pelvis tumors were high stage (pT3) at time of presentation. Adjacent to the osteoclast-like giant-cell neoplasm in the same specimen, all patients had urothelial carcinoma in situ and/or high-grade papillary urothelial carcinoma. Multinucleated cells had identical morphological and immunohistochemical properties of osteoclasts; positive for CD-68, LCA, CD51 and CD54, and negative for cytokeratins and
EMA
. Varying percentages of mononuclear cells expressed alpha-smooth muscle actin (4/6), desmin (1/6), S-100 (4/6), LCA (2/6) and CD68 (6/6). However, mononuclear cells were also positive for epithelial markers in 4/6 tumors (cytokeratins AE-1/AE-3, Cam 5.2, CK7 and/or
EMA
).
p53
stained mononuclear tumor cells in three cases, paralleling the staining on the accompanying urothelial carcinoma. Ki-67 stained mononuclear tumor cells, but not osteoclast-like giant cells. Follow-up data were available in five cases. One patient developed recurrence of noninvasive urothelial carcinoma and is still alive. Four patients were dead due to disease within 15 months, three with distant metastases. The intimate association of these tumors with urothelial carcinoma along with their immunohistochemical profile supports an epithelial origin for the mononuclear cells and non-neoplastic reactive histiocytic lineage for the osteoclast-like giant cells.
...
PMID:Osteoclast-rich undifferentiated carcinomas of the urinary tract. 1632 50
A case of psammoma body rich gliofibroma is reported. Computed tomography (CT) showed a high-density mass without contrast enhancement in the right cerebellar hemisphere. Magnetic resonance images (MRI) demonstrated a mass with a mixture of high- and iso-intensity regions without meningeal attachment on both T1- and T2-weighted images. Pathological examinations revealed a biphasic pattern consisting of tumor cells in sparce cellularity and dense fibrous connective tissue. Numerous psammoma bodies of uniform size were found in the stroma. The tumor cells expressed glial fibrillary acidic protein and S-100, but not
p53
, vimentin and
EMA
. This is the first report describing a case of psammomatous gliofibroma.
...
PMID:Cerebellar gliofibroma with numerous psammoma bodies. 1664 12
4 cases (2 males and 2 females) of mucinous tubular and spindle-cell carcinoma of the kidney were studied. The patients' age was 43 to 87 years. Microscopically, this tumor comprised two major cell populations. One of them involved spindle cells with a sparse cytoplasm, which were arranged in the fascicular pattern, often resembling low-grade smooth muscle tumors. The other population was small cuboidal cells with round nuclei and an eosinophilic cytoplasm. The mitotic activity was low. Only one tumor had both cell components. The other three tumors were represented by the second type cells. Immunohistochemical staining with avidin-biotin was performed by using cytokeratin, vimentin, SMA,
p53
, Bcl 2,
EMA
, and CD10. All cases were stained positively with antibodies to the cytokeratins AE1-AE2 and vimentin. The expression of
EMA
, Bcl 2, and CK7 was varying in different tumors. Responses to smooth muscle actin,
p53
, CK20, and CD10 were negative in all cases. Mucinous tubular and spindle-cell carcinoma of the kidney should be differentiated from angiomyolipoma with the preponderance of a leiomyomatous component, renal smooth muscle neoplasms, metanephrotic adenoma, and renal cell carcinoma with sarcomatoid differentiation.
...
PMID:[Mucinous tubular and spindle-cell carcinoma of the kidney]. 1698 88
Perivascular epithelioid cell tumor (PEComa) is rare entity and has been described only recently. By immunohistochemistry and genetics it belongs to the family of tumours which comprises angiomyolipoma, clear cell "sugar" tumor of lung, lymphangioleiomyomatosis and clear cell myomelanotic tumor of ligamentum falciforme/teres hepatis. We describe an unusual case of hepatic PEComa arising in a 55-year-old woman with previous history of glioblastoma. Histologically the tumor grew in expansive way, and was composed of clear and eosinophilic epithelioid cels, without vascular or lipomatous component characteristic of angiomyolipoma. There was mild nuclear pleomorphism, sporadic mitotic activity and haemorrhage without necrosis. On immunohistochemistry, the tumor was HMB-45+50, Melan-A and smooth muscle actin positive. Tyrosinase, S-100 protein, cytokeratin coctail,
EMA
, vimentin, muscle specific actin, CD10, TTF-1, hepatocyte, desmin and cyclin D1 were negative. Sporadic nuclear
p53
positivity was seen. The main differential diagnosis of hepatic PEComa includes clear cell variant of liver cell adenoma and hepatocellular carcinoma, metastases of various clear cell carcinomas and metastasis of malignant melanoma. In respect of uncertain biologic potential of PEComa, long term follow up is indicated.
...
PMID:[Perivascular epithelioid cell tumor (PEComa) of the liver: a case report and review of the literature]. 1737 Apr 72
Sebaceous gland carcinoma is a common tumour in male gerbils but, to date, no information is available on its immunohistochemical properties. This report describes the histopathological and immunohistochemical features of such a tumour from a 4.5-year-old male gerbil. The tumour immunoreactivity profile was studied in respect of
p53 protein
, CEA,
EMA
, c-erbB-2, cytokeratin (CK) 14 and the CKs detected by AE1/AE3 antibodies (i.e. high molecular weight CKs 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 10, 14, 15 and 16, and low molecular weight CKs 7, 8 and 19). The differences observed in
p53
and c-erbB-2 immunolabelling between carcinomatous and hyperplastic areas suggest that
p53
mutations and amplification of c-erbB-2 may play a significant role in the oncogenesis of sebaceous gland carcinoma in the gerbil.
...
PMID:Immunohistochemical characterization of a sebaceous gland carcinoma in a gerbil (Meriones unguiculatus). 1764 91
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