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Query: UMLS:C0406810 (
NAME
)
13,345
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
In 100 mucinous tumors of the ovary (37 benign, 24 borderline, and 39 malignant), the authors determined by histochemical and immunohistochemical techniques the frequencies and patterns of expression of a total of nine markers of gastric, intestinal, and pancreatobiliary duct epithelial cells. M1, a mucin antigen, and cathepsin E (CaE), an aspartic proteinase, two markers of normal gastric superficial/foveolar epithelial cells, were expressed in 95 and 92 tumors, respectively. Periodic acid-concanavalin A-reactive mucin or pepsinogen (PG) II, markers of gastric mucus neck and pyloric gland cells, were found in 79 tumors. All of these tumors also expressed M1 or CaE. DU-PAN-2 and the N-terminal epitope of
gastrin-releasing peptide
, markers of normal pancreatobiliary duct cells, were found in 70 and 49 tumors, respectively, and
CAR
-5 and M3SI, markers of intestinal mucin, were expressed in 51 and 30 tumors, respectively. All tumors expressed at least two of the nine markers studied; none expressed PG I, a marker of gastric chief cells. The mucopeptic cell marker, PG II, was significantly more common in benign and borderline than in malignant tumors (P less than 0.005), whereas
CAR
-5 and M3SI, markers of intestinal mucin, were expressed significantly more often in malignant than in benign and borderline tumors (P less than 0.001). By electron microscopic examination, many tumor cells had fine structural features characteristic of gastric superficial/foveolar and pyloric gland cells, intestinal columnar or goblet cells, and endocervical cells. The results indicate that gastroenteropancreatic cell differentiation--and, in particular, gastric type differentiation--is a prominent feature of ovarian mucinous tumors.
...
PMID:Ovarian mucinous tumors frequently express markers of gastric, intestinal, and pancreatobiliary epithelial cells. 131 84
It has been found by immunohistochemical staining that antigens normally found in gastric and/or intestinal epithelial cells are expressed in most differentiated duct cell carcinomas of the pancreas. Among 88 such tumors, 93% and 92%, respectively, expressed M1 and cathepsin E, markers of gastric surface-foveolar epithelial cells, 51% expressed pepsinogen II, a marker of gastroduodenal mucopeptic cells, 48% expressed
CAR
-5, a marker of colorectal epithelial cells, and 35% expressed M3SI, a marker of small intestinal goblet cells. Most of the tumors also expressed normal pancreatic duct antigens; 97% expressed DU-PAN-2, and 59% expressed N-terminus
gastrin-releasing peptide
. In agreement with these findings, electron microscopy revealed malignant cells with fine structural features of gastric foveolar cells, gastric mucopeptic cells, intestinal goblet cells, intestinal columnar cells, pancreatic duct epithelial cells, and cells with features of more than one cell type. Normal pancreatic duct epithelium did not express any marker of gastrointestinal epithelial cells, whereas such benign lesions as mucinous cell hypertrophy and papillary hyperplasia commonly expressed gut-type antigens but rarely expressed pancreatic duct cell markers. By contrast, lesions characterized by atypical papillary hyperplasia commonly expressed both gastric and pancreatic duct cell markers. Metaplastic pyloric-type glands expressed pepsinogen II and, except for their expression of cathepsin E, were indistinguishable from normal pyloric glands. In marked contrast, the immunohistochemical and ultrastructural features of 14 ductuloacinar cell tumors were those of cells lining terminal ductules, centroacinar cells, and/or acinar cells; none expressed any gut-type antigen. The results indicate that gastrointestinal differentiation is common in both benign and malignant lesions of pancreatic duct epithelium and suggest that duct cell carcinomas are histogenetically related to gastric- and intestinal-type metaplastic changes of epithelial cells lining the main and interlobular ducts of the pancreas.
...
PMID:Ductal cancers of the pancreas frequently express markers of gastrointestinal epithelial cells. 169 51
Endocrine L-cells of the distal intestine synthesize both peptide YY (PYY) and proglucagon-derived peptides (PGDPs), whose release has been reported to be either parallel or selective. Here we compare the release mechanisms of PYY, glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1), and oxyntomodulin-like immunoreactivity (OLI) in vivo. Anaesthetized rats were intraduodenally (ID) given either a mixed semi-liquid meal or oleic acid, or they received oleic acid or short chain fatty acids (SCFA) intracolonically (IC). The ID meal released the three peptides with a similar time-course (peak at 30 min); ID oleic acid produced a progressive release of PYY and OLI, while GLP-1 release was less. IC oleic acid or SCFA released smaller (but significant) amounts of PYY but no OLI or GLP-1. Hexamethonium inhibited most of the response to the ID meal and ID oleic acid, but did not change the PYY response to IC oleic acid. NG-nitro-l-arginine methyl ester (l-
NAME
, a nitric oxide synthase inhibitor) inhibited meal-induced PYY release and left OLI and GLP-1 unaffected. BW10 (a
gastrin-releasing peptide
antagonist) had no effect on the meal-induced release of either peptide. These results suggest a parallel initial release of PYY, OLI and GLP-1 after the ID meal, or oleic acid, by an indirect mechanism triggered in the proximal bowel, using nicotinic synapses, and involving nitric oxide release for PYY and an unknown mediator for PGDPs. For PYY there is a later phase of peptide release, probably induced by direct contact between nutrients and colonic L-cells.
...
PMID:Comparison of the postprandial release of peptide YY and proglucagon-derived peptides in the rat. 1039 59