Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0699790 (colon cancer)
28,837 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Immunohistochemical techniques were used to determine the distribution and cellular location of the mature and precursor forms of a colonic-type mucin in normal and malignant epithelial tissues. The antisera used in this study were prepared against native human colon cancer mucin (LS), partially deglycosylated mucin (HFA or GalNAc-apomucin), and fully deglycosylated mucin (HFB or apomucin). These antisera reacted with most mucin-producing cells of the normal gastrointestinal tract, salivary ductular cells, bronchial epithelial cells, some bronchial mucous glands, and squamous epithelial cells of the esophagus. Breast, endometrium, ovary, prostate, liver, and thyroid were nonreactive. In most normal organs, HFB reactivity was present in the supranuclear and perinuclear cytoplasm and LS and HFA were located primarily in goblet cell vacuoles, apical cytoplasm, and luminal secretions. These findings are consistent with the expected subcellular locations of apomucin and more "mature" mucins. LS, HFA, and HFB were frequently expressed in adenocarcinomas of the colon, stomach, pancreas, and lung. Lymphoma, sarcoma, and melanoma specimens were nonreactive. Alterations in the expression of these mucin antigens in malignant tissues included loss of subcellular compartmentalization, increased intensity of staining, and disappearance of staining. In addition, de novo expression of HFB was observed in one of five breast carcinomas and three of five ovarian mucinous cystadenocarcinomas. These data demonstrate that LS, HFA, and HFB are useful for studying the organ specificities and biosynthetic pathways of one type of mucin in normal and malignant tissues.
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PMID:Expression of native and deglycosylated colon cancer mucin antigens in normal and malignant epithelial tissues. 223 15

Mucin from xenografts of LS174T human colon cancer cells was treated with anhydrous HF for 1 h at 0 degree C to give a product (HFA) with over 80% of the glucosamine and hexose removed, but retaining some galactosamine, and for 3 h at room temperature to give a product (HFB) devoid of carbohydrate. Rabbit antibodies against HFA bound to HFA much more than to HFB, and bound to native mucin to an intermediate extent. Antibodies to HFB bound to HFB more than to HFA, and did not bind to native mucin. Both HFA and native mucin bound a number of lectins, but HFB did not. By SDS/polyacrylamide-gel electrophoresis and size-exclusion h.p.l.c., native mucin and HFA are of apparent molecular mass greater than 400 kDa, whereas HFB is heterogeneous and of low molecular mass. On Western blots, antibody to HFA detected both high-molecular-mass mucin and a 90 kDa protein in homogenates of LS174T cells. Antibody to HFB detected a major 70 kDa band as well as higher-molecular-mass species. In tissue sections of normal colon and colon cancers, antibody to HFA showed both cytoplasmic and extracellular staining, whereas antibody to HFB generally stained only cytoplasmic antigens. These results indicate that anti-HFB antibody is specific for apo-mucin, whereas anti-HFA antibody is specific for GalNAc-apo-mucin.
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PMID:Deglycosylation of mucin from LS174T colon cancer cells by hydrogen fluoride treatment. 277 37