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Query: UMLS:C0699790 (colon cancer)
28,837 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Immunoperoxidase staining for Regan isoenzyme of alkaline phosphatase was performed on cryostat sections of five human tumor tisssues. With a direct immunoperoxidase staining for the localization of Regan isoenzyme at the light and electron microscope levels, sections previously fixed with 0.05 M phosphate-buffered 4% paraformaldehyde were reacted with rabbit antisera to human placenta alkaline phosphatase conjugated to horseradish peroxidase. Comparison of conventional histochemistry and immunohistochemistry for Regan isoenzyme indicated that strong specific immunoperoxidase staining appeared on the cell membrane surface, and a diffuse one, in the cytoplasm of lung and colon cancer tissue cells showing L-phenylalanine-sensitive alkaline phosphatase. No immunoperoxidase reaction was obtained in tumor cells showing sensitivity to L-homoarginine or lacking aklaline phosphatase activity.
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PMID:Direct immunoperoxidase staining for Regan isoenzyme of alkaline phosphatase in human tumor tissues. 18 52

A triple-bridge, indirect peroxidase-antiperoxidase method for demonstrating carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA) in frozen, ethanol-fixed or formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded specimens was evaluated. Examination of 359 tissue specimens--234 malignant tumors, 37 benign neoplasms, 41 nonneoplastic diseased tissues, and 47 normal specimens--showed that CEA could usually be demonstrated in a group of cancers. We could detect CEA in carcinomas of the stomach, colon, rectum, pancreas, lung, and cervix. However, malignant tumors of the breast, prostate, kidney, larynx, brain, lymphoreticular system, soft tissues, and skin proved negative for CEA by the immunoperoxidase test. CEA could be detected in ethanol- or formalin-fixed sections. The only nonmalignant specimens showing CEA staining were a few benign tumors, the mucosae of some cases of colitis, and the resection margins of 2 cases of colon cancer; however, these were commonly very weak reactions. Measurement of tumor CEA content by radioimmunoassay revealed two causes for this relative specificity of the immunoperoxidase test for CEA:1) a quantitative difference existed in tissue CEA among the various specimens, and 2) the threshold for CEA staining in malignant specimens was usually above that in nonmalignant specimens. An analysis of the formalin-paraffin-treated sections showed that immunoperoxidase-tested CEA positivity reflected CEA levels in tissue of at least 3.0-5.0 mug/g; this permitted retrospective estimates of minimal tissue CEA concentrations in older histopathologic specimens by the immunoperoxidase reaction method. Formalin-paraffin-treated sections as old as 10 years still had demonstrable CEA. Although tumor CEA concentration correlated well with immunoperoxidase staining for CEA, plasma CEA titer did not necessarily reflect tumor CEA content. CEA positivity in primary and secondary tumors was strongly correlated; it was less strongly correlated with level of tumor differentiation.
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PMID:Carcinoembryonic antigen in histopathology: immunoperoxidase staining of conventional tissue sections. 79 93

A monoclonal antibody, F11C, was raised against rat colon cancer cells. Its immunoreactivity on normal human and rat gut as well as human and rat colonic tumours was studied by the avidin-biotin-peroxidase complex technique. In both normal rat and human gastrointestinal tract, F11C stained surface epithelial cells from the fundus to distal colon, mainly as supranuclear vesicles. These vesicles appeared to be part of the Golgi apparatus on electron microscopy with immunogold labelling. Twenty primary rat colon tumours and 28 of 43 human colon tumours were also stained, with a heterogeneous pattern but much more strongly than the normal colonic mucosa. Biochemical purification suggested that in rat tumours F11C epitope was carried by a high molecular weight glycoprotein. Absorption experiments with synthetic oligosaccharides showed that F11C monoclonal antibody reacted with blood group A-related oligosaccharides. Nevertheless, F11C reactivity on human tissues was not related to the individual ABO or Lewis phenotype.
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PMID:Histological reactivity of a monoclonal antibody against rat colon cancer cells on human and rat normal gut and colonic tumours. 137 80

Preliminary investigations suggested the importance of an evaluation of different tissue preparation methods frequently used for immunohistochemical analysis of human or murine monoclonal antibodies on human tissue. Colon adenocarcinomas and adjacent morphologically normal colon epithelia were analyzed with an indirect immunoperoxidase technique. Duplicate tissue specimens were (1) snap frozen and fixed in acetone, (2) formalin fixed and paraffin embedded, with or (3) without ensuing treatment with pronase, or (4) alcohol fixed and paraffin embedded. Three different human monoclonal anti-colon cancer IgM antibodies, COU-1, D4213, and F10279, were used in the present study. Endogenous immunoglobulin and the secretory-component-mediated IgG binding were blocked on frozen sections with Fab' anti-IgM and anti-SC antibody. Bound monoclonal antibody was detected with horseradish peroxidase-anti-IgM. COU-1 was found to stain frozen sections of all 25 cancer and adjacent normal colon epithelia. In contrast, on formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded tissue, only 80% (20/25) of the colon cancer and 44% (11/25) of the adjacent normal colon epithelia were positive. After treatment of the formalin-fixed sections with pronase, all cancers and normal adjacent epithelia were stained, but the cancer cells were more intensely stained than the normal colon epithelial cells. On alcohol-fixed tissues, intense staining was found in all the colon carcinomas analyzed, whereas no staining was found of the adjacent normal colon epithelia, except for a few cells in some of the sections investigated.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Evaluation of procedures for the fixation and processing of human tissue for immunohistochemical analysis of human monoclonal antibodies. 171 86

A new immunohistochemical assay was developed for the detection of human monoclonal antibody (HuMAb) bound to human biopsied tumor tissues. A murine anti-idiotype monoclonal antibody, alpha type, 18C6 (IgGl), was raised against an IgM HuMAb, L612, defining a tumor-associated ganglioside antigen (GM3) and used as a probe in a three step cell-binding assay (HuMAb + anti-id + biotinylated anti-mouse Ig). Anti-id 18C6 has an exclusive binding specificity for HuMAb L612, but does not interfere with the binding of L612 to antigen positive melanoma cell lines or to a purified antigen, GM3. The applicability of 18C6 in the three step cell-binding assay was tested first using a melanoma cell line, UCLASO-M12. L612 bound to M12 cells was specifically detected by 18C6 without any background reactivity in ELISA. When this assay was compared with the standard two-step cell-binding assay (HuMAb + peroxidase-conjugated anti-human IgM) using various cultured tumor cell lines, parallel reactivity was observed. The three-step cell-binding assay was then applied to various fresh-frozen human tumor sections. Positive reactivity was demonstrated on various histologic types of human tumor tissues: primary melanoma (10/10), metastatic melanoma (4/4), nevus (10/10), lung cancer (3/6), breast cancer (2/6), and colon cancer (1/1). Adjacent normal tissues were unstained. Control experiments included the cell-binding assay with L612 alone, 18C6 alone. L612 + unrelated mouse IgG, and unrelated IgM HuMAb (L72) + 18C6; but biotinylated anti-mouse IgG did not react with these control preparations. The results indicate that anti-id 18C6 is a highly specific probe to assess the expression of the ganglioside antigenic epitope recognized by the L612 HuMAb on biopsied human tumor tissues.
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PMID:Murine monoclonal anti-idiotype antibody (alpha) as a probe to detect human monoclonal antibody bound to human tumor tissues. 223 Jan 46

Monoclonal antibody (MAb) B72.3 was generated using a membrane-enriched fraction of a human mammary carcinoma biopsy. It has demonstrated reactivity to the majority of human adenocarcinomas including colorectal, gastric, pancreatic, ovarian, endometrial, mammary, and nonsmall cell lung cancer as well as weak or nondetectable reactivity to the majority of normal adult tissues, with the exception of secretory endometrium. Radiolabeled B72.3 has demonstrated MAb localization of carcinoma in approximately 70% of several hundred colorectal and ovarian carcinoma patients. The B72.3-reactive antigen, tumor-associated glycoprotein 72, has been purified from a human colon cancer xenograft and used as an immunogen to generate second generation MAbs. Twenty-eight of these MAbs, designated CC (colon cancer), were shown to be reactive with tumor-associated glycoprotein 72; direct-binding radioimmunoassays, Western blotting, live cell surface binding assays, liquid competition radioimmunoassays, and affinity constant measurements distinguished CC MAbs from each other and from B72.3. Two of these MAbs, CC49 and CC112, were selected for further immunohistochemical characterization. These MAbs were tested here against a spectrum of normal, benign, and malignant human adult tissues using the avidin-biotin-peroxidase technique, and their reactivity was compared with B72.3. Both CC MAbs were more reactive than B72.3 against a range of tumors. Extensive testing with MAbs CC49 and B72.3 using serial tissue sections demonstrated that both MAbs reacted similarly to most normal adult tissues with MAb CC49 reacting stronger to inflammatory colonic tissue. In 35 of 48 (72%) carcinoma biopsies of the gastrointestinal tract, ovary, breast, and lung in which one of the MAbs reacted to at least 20% of the cells, CC49 reacted to a greater percentage of carcinoma cells and/or tumor-associated mucin than B72.3. The reciprocal was observed in only 2% of the carcinomas. This study thus provides evidence that these second generation anti-tumor-associated glycoprotein MAbs may be more efficient than B72.3 in the further study of human carcinoma cell populations and in the diagnostic and therapeutic procedures presently being pursued with MAb B72.3.
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PMID:Enhanced tumor binding using immunohistochemical analyses by second generation anti-tumor-associated glycoprotein 72 monoclonal antibodies versus monoclonal antibody B72.3 in human tissue. 229 74

A lectin reactivity specific to human bowel carcinoma is reported. Twenty-six cases of carcinoma of the large intestine were examined. Normal as well as transitional mucosa and carcinoma tissues were removed from surgical specimens, and paraffin sections were stained with a battery of histochemical methods to characterize glycoconjugates, including high iron diamine-Alcian blue pH 2.5, modified PAS reaction to detect various sialic acids, paradoxical concanavalin A (Con A) staining, and stainings with 10 species of lectins labeled with horseradish peroxidase (HRP). Among the techniques employed, only Griffonia simplicifolia agglutinin-II (GS-II, specific to glucosamine)-HRP staining revealed highly selective affinity to the carcinoma tissues; the apical surface of the carcinoma cells stained most intensely. GS-II reactivity of the cells persisted after prior periodate oxidation, but was significantly enhanced by neuraminidase digestion. Comparison with two other lectin stainings with the same sugar specificity, viz. paradoxical concanavalin A staining and wheat germ agglutinin (WGA)-HRP staining, showed that the GS-II reactive sites lacked class III Con A reactivity but were possibly included in WGA reactive sites. The GS-II-HRP staining should be helpful in the identification of carcinoma tissue and for analysis of carcinoma-associated antigens.
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PMID:Large bowel carcinoma-specific antigens detected by the lectin, Griffonia simplicifolia agglutinin-II. 241 1

Established human colon cancer cells with distinct degrees of differentiation (LoVo, well-differentiated; SW620, intermediate differentiation; and SW1116, poorly differentiated) were used to produce monoclonal antibodies (MoAbs) by standard hybridoma techniques. Specificity was tested by an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay against human foreskin cells, 7 established human colon cancer lines, a panel of 17 established human tumor lines of different histological origins, purified carcinoembryonic antigen, panels of red blood cells, and a suspension of lymphocytes obtained from 30 random normal donors. MoAb LoVo-F4 3E4/1A1/2E10 (MoAb F4/2E10) reacted with five colon cancer lines and only slightly with MCF-7 cells (estrogen receptor positive breast carcinoma). MoAb LoVo-F4 3E4/1A1/5C10 also reacted with the previous five colon cancer lines and with two gastric cancer lines. A MoAb obtained with a LoVo 3 M KCl membrane extract reacted exclusively with LoVo cells. MoAb SW620-F1 4E5/1A3 reacted with only three colon cancer cell lines and an estrogen receptor negative breast cancer line. MoAb SW1116-F2 1E3/1A1 reacted with four colon carcinoma cell lines, one gastric cancer line, MCF-7 cells, and a lung cancer line. MoAb SW1116-F2 1F3/1B1 reacted intensely with purified carcinoembryonic antigen and with every carcinoembryonic antigen-producing cell line available in our laboratory. Further studies concentrated on the immunoglobulin G1 MoAb F4/2E10. We demonstrated that the purified MoAb did not inhibit binding of MoAb CA19-9 to any colon Ca lines and reacted with fresh human colon carcinoma specimens regardless of whether they were processed by cryostat or paraffin embedding after fixation in formalin for 24 through 96 h. Using the peroxidase-antiperoxidase technique, MoAb F4/2E10 did not react with 23 normal adult and 18 fetal (less than 3 months old) human tissue specimens. When tested on 312 specimens of diverse histological origins and diseases, the MoAb was positive in 57 of 62 colorectal cancers, in 12 of 19 villous adenomas, in 5 of 7 adenomatous polyps, and in 10 of 12 cases of ulcerative colitis. With the exception of 2 of 15 cases of Crohn's disease that were slightly positive, all tissues from nonmalignant diseases (regardless of histological origin) were consistently negative. There was only weak reactivity in 2 of 18 breast cancers, 7 of 21 squamous cell carcinomas, 4 of 27 lung tumors, 1 of 13 kidney carcinomas and in 7 miscellaneous tumors.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:New monoclonal antibodies against colon cancer-associated antigens. 242 73

A panel of 14 monoclonal antibodies (MoAbs) (4 raised against breast cancer, 6 against colon cancer and 4 against melanoma) were used to phenotype frozen sections of tumor biopsies obtained from 110 patients, by avidin-biotin-peroxidase complex techniques. We observed heterogeneity of antigen expression among the multiple metastatic lesions of single patients, as well as among tumor lesions from different patients with similar tumor histotypes. A wide range of cross-reactivity of anti-(breast-carcinoma) and anti-(colon-carcinoma) MoAbs with other carcinoma histotypes and limited reactivity with melanoma and sarcoma was detected. Some of our anti-melanoma MoAbs were also found to cross-react with selected carcinomas. Nine of the 14 MoAbs most reactive with carcinomas of diverse histotypes have been identified. A mixture or 'cocktail' of different MoAbs could be selected for each individual patient in order to achieve binding of MoAbs with most, if not 100% of tumor cells. This study illustrates the approach that we have taken to individualize the cocktail of MoAbs for the development of patient-specific therapeutic immunoconjugates.
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PMID:Immunohistochemical phenotyping of human solid tumors with monoclonal antibodies in devising biotherapeutic strategies. 264 52

To gain a better understanding of the biologic development of rectal adenocarcinomas, the authors evaluated the level of ras gene protein product (p21) in the available material of 74 Dukes' B adenocarcinomas, 64 Dukes' C adenocarcinomas, and 60 lymph-node metastases resected at the University of Chicago Medical Center between 1965 and 1981. Pathologic slides and archival paraffin blocks were retrieved for confirmation of the original diagnosis and measurement of p21 content. P21 titers were obtained using the RAP-5 monoclonal antibody in a semiquantitative immunohistochemical assay. Titer was expressed as the highest dilution giving definitive staining using the avidin-biotin peroxidase method. The analysis indicated that a higher percentage of Dukes' stage C rectal adenocarcinomas had high (greater than or equal to 1:40,000) p21 titers than Dukes' B adenocarcinomas (68.8 vs. 51.4 percent, respectively, P less than 0.05). In view of recent data suggesting that ras oncogene expression confers invasive and metastatic capabilities to NIH 3T3 cells, the authors believe this study offers evidence that overexpression of ras oncogene with overproduction of p21 protein product may be an important prerequisite for the acquisition of metastatic capabilities in the early stages of colon cancer.
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PMID:Ras oncogene and the acquisition of metastasizing properties by rectal adenocarcinoma. 266 52


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