Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UNIPROT:P01275 (glucagon)
26,492 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The gross, histomorphologic, cytochemical, and immunocytochemical findings in 16 dogs with medullary thyroid carcinoma were evaluated. Grossly, the neoplasms were encapsulated, firm, lobulated, and grey-white to tan. The typical histologic pattern was groups or sheets of round to polygonal cells with fibrovascular stroma, which was thickened and hyalinized in places. Variants of clear cell (two dogs), giant cell (one dog), and oxyphil cell (one dog) types were also seen. In all 16 dogs, Grimelius-stained sections of the neoplasms revealed intracytoplasmic silver granules; ten tumors contained amyloid and four contained mucin. Immunohistochemically, the neoplasms reacted to AE1/AE3 (n = 13), S-100 protein (n = 5), neuron specific enolase (n = 14), synaptophysin (n = 11), calcitonin (n = 16), somatostatin (n = 4), gastrin (n = 7), and serotonin (n = 6). Only one neoplasm was positive for vimentin. None of the neoplasms reacted to antibodies for neurofilaments, thyroglobulin, insulin, glucagon, or adrenocorticotrophic hormone. Eleven neoplasms contained multiple (two to four) peptides, in various combinations. It was concluded that in dogs, gross and histologic features can be used to distinguish medullary thyroid carcinoma from other thyroid malignancies. Cytochemical and immunocytochemical studies with neuron specific enolase, synaptophysin, and calcitonin can be used to establish the diagnosis of medullary thyroid carcinoma in dogs.
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PMID:Gross, histologic, cytochemical, and immunocytochemical study of medullary thyroid carcinoma in sixteen dogs. 190 46

Microcystic adenoma (serous cystadenoma) of the pancreas (MA) is an unusual benign tumor of uncertain histogenesis. We have studied 14 cases of MA from 11 women and three men. The average age at diagnosis was 64 years. Six tumors were discovered incidentally. Tumors varied from 2.5 to 12 cm in greatest dimension and all were multicystic; eight tumors were located in the pancreatic head, two in the body, and three in the tail. Each tumor was composed of variably sized cysts lined by simple cuboidal or flattened, focally glycogen-rich epithelium. The stroma was variably collagenized and showed highly vascularized, delicate to broad fibrous septae, which focally contained dystrophic calcification, cholesterol clefts, and hemosiderin. Immunohistochemical studies were performed on eight cases to determine the cell of origin. Epithelial membrane antigen and a low-molecular-weight keratin, detected by monoclonal antibodies PKK1 or AE1/AE3, were diffusely seen in tumor cells of all cases. Tumor cells were uniformly negative for carcinoembryonic antigen, chromogranin, insulin, glucagon, somatostatin, vasoactive intestinal peptide, pancreatic polypeptide, and a low-molecular-weight keratin detected by monoclonal antibody PKK2. Tumor cell antigen reactivity most resembled that seen in normal centroacinar and ductal cells. Electron microscopy of seven cases showed primitive tumor cells with irregularly spaced, short, blunt microvilli, luminal occluding junctions and belt desmosomes, bundles of filaments including dense bodies in both apical and basal cell cytoplasm, sparse organelles, and variable but often pronounced amounts of glycogen. These ultrastructural features most closely resembled the normal pancreatic centroacinar cell. Based on both immunohistochemical and ultrastructural features described above, we conclude that the centroacinar cell is the cell of origin of MA.
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PMID:Microcystic adenoma (serous cystadenoma) of the pancreas. A study of 14 cases with immunohistochemical and electron-microscopic correlation. 335 51

Some cytologic specimens may be limited in quantity, and this may hamper or preclude the performance of immunocytochemistry (ICC) in cases where more than one antibody (ab) is required by ICC to arrive at a definitive diagnosis. There is very little information in the cytology literature regarding the use of ICC for specimens that are limited in quantity. In this study, we describe a method, derived from the principles of double immunolabelling, whereby more than one ab test can be repeatedly used on the same Papanicolaou stained slide. Multiple cytologic scrape preparations fixed in 95% ethanol were obtained from fresh surgical specimens including carcinomas of the breast, endometrium, stomach, ovary and colon. Nonneoplastic tissues included tonsil (2), lymph node (2) and myometrium. Papanicolaou stained slides or unstained slides were subjected to two sequential ICC procedures, the first in which the ab was known to be nonreactive with the cells (insulin, glucagon, or somatostatin) and the second in which the ab was known to be positive in the cells. Positive controls for the known positive abs included a single-step ICC procedure as well as the tissue section. The test abs included CAM 5.2, AE1/3, K903, LCA, L26, UCHL-1, s-100, mCEA, GCDFP-15, vimentin, muscle specific actin and desmin. Identical two-step ab procedures were carried out on the tissues from the same surgical specimens. For Papanicolaou stained cytologic specimens, abs were reactive and gave excellent results for the repeat second-step ICC method. There was no false positive or false negative staining. This "repeat ICC" method also gave excellent results on the tissue sections. Immunocytochemistry can be performed more than once on the very same cytologic specimen if the initial ICC antibody attempt is negative. This method may be especially useful in situations where more than one antibody is needed on a very limited cytologic sample size.
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PMID:Immunocytochemistry on cytologic specimens of limited quantity. 948 46

Middle ear adenoma (MEA) is a rare tumor postulated to take origin from the lining epithelium of the middle ear cavity. The authors report on a case of MEA arising in a 53-year old woman suffering from a sensation of fullness in her left ear, otalgia, and light left-sided hearing loss. Histopathologically, the lesion was composed of cuboidal and polygonal cells displaying a trabecular, tubulo-glandular, and solid pattern of growth. Immunohistochemically, neoplastic cells diffusely stained with anti-vimentin antibodies and were focally positive for chromogranin A, neuron-specific enolase, lysozyme, and cytokeratins AE1/AE3. The majority of tumor cells showed weak and diffuse staining with both anti-PP and anti-ACTH antibodies and intense positivity with anti-glucagon and anti Leu-7 antibodies. Ultrastructural investigation revealed both mucinous-glandular and neuroendocrine differentiation. The authors suggest that the appropriate terminology would be adeno-carcinoid or amphicrine tumor of the middle ear rather than "adenoma," a term that does not reflect its dual nature.
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PMID:Middle ear adenoma is an amphicrine tumor: why call it adenoma? 1129 23

A 12-year-old neutered female mixed-breed dog was referred for occasional vomiting that had increased progressively in frequency over the past 3 months. Palpation of the abdomen revealed a firm mass of unknown aetiology, located within the cranial to mid abdomen, while abdominal surgical exploration revealed a well-defined abdominal mass of pancreatic origin. The pancreatic mass caused lateral displacement of the duodenum as well as medial displacement of the pylorus, resulting in impairment of pyloric outflow. Further examination revealed a firm, poorly vascularized and coarsely lobulated structure. The histopathological findings were consistent with severe pancreatic lipomatosis and atrophy. Immunohistochemically, the remnant pancreatic cells were positive for cytokeratins AE1/AE3 and glucagon, and negative for insulin. Routine follow-up with the referring veterinarian showed no evidence of postoperative complications, but the dog continued to deteriorate further and died despite medical management. Pancreatic lipomatosis is a rare condition in small animal practice. The aetiology or predisposing factors have not been identified in animals.
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PMID:Extensive Fatty Replacement of the Pancreas (Pancreatic Lipomatosis) in a Dog. 3181 69