Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UNIPROT:P01350 (gastrin)
9,683 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A case of gastrointestinal autonomic nerve tumour with light microscopic, immunohistochemical and ultrastructural examination is reported. The tumour was composed of spindle cells or large cells with clear cytoplasm and showed intense staining for vimentin and focal staining for neuron-specific enolase, chromogranin, synaptophysin, gastrin, P substance and S-100 protein. Ultrastructural examination showed long processes with dense core granules and the absence of features characteristic of other gastrointestinal stromal tumours. In addition we noted small traces of basal lamina and the absence of synaptic vesicles. It seems that the biological behaviour of gastrointestinal autonomic nerve tumours is aggressive but there are too few reports on which to conclude anything about their prognosis. Our findings suggest that tumour has a neuroectodermal differentiation.
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PMID:Gastrointestinal autonomic nerve tumours: a case report with ultrastructural and immunohistochemical studies. 131 14

Tumor tissue located in the occipital lobe with hemorrhage was obtained from a 19-year-old patient. Histological examination indicated it to consist of undifferentiated small, round cells without neuronal or glial differentiation, and possibly to be a type of primitive neuroectodermal tumor. The tumor cells were cultured for 3 years and a continuous cell line (KK-2) was established. KK-2 was transplantable to nude mice. With immunocytochemistry, neuron-specific enolase, protein gene product 9.5, vimentin, TUJ1 (a monoclonal antibody specific for neuron-associated class III beta-tubulin isotype) and 6H7 (a monoclonal antibody to NCAM produced by us) were detected. None of the following could be found: glial fibrillary acidic protein, S-100 protein, neurofilament and synaptophysin, calcitonin gene-related peptide, gastrin releasing peptide corticotropin-releasing factor, substance P, somatostatin, chromogranin, aromatic L-amino acid decarboxylase and tyrosine hydroxylase. The original tumor and KK-2 cells obtained after 3 years of culture and transplants in nude mice displayed essentially the same ultrastructural and immunohistochemical characteristics. KK-2 cells showed no differentiation to mature neuronal, glial or ependymal cells. This cell line may possibly serve as a useful model for studying cellular differentiation of human neuroectodermal tumors and normal neuronal development.
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PMID:A continuous cell line (KK-2) from a supratentorial primitive neuroectodermal tumor. 132 7

A histologic and immunohistochemical study was carried out in 23 unselected nonantral gastric carcinoids and their precursor lesions classified according to Solcia et al. None of the patients showed Zollinger-Ellison syndrome. Two variants of carcinoids showing distinctive pathologic and pathogenetic characteristics were identified on the basis of presence or absence of associated chronic atrophic gastritis type A (A-CAG). Chronic atrophic gastritis type A was found in 19 cases showing either single or multiple neoplasms, tumor extension limited to the mucosa or submucosa, consistent endocrine cell precursor changes in extratumoral mucosa, and consistent hypergastrinemia and/or G cell hyperplasia. Associated precursor lesions were only hyperplastic in all but two cases with single carcinoids whereas they were also dysplastic in all but one case with multiple carcinoids. The four tumors arising in nonatrophic mucosa were all single, more aggressive, and not associated with extratumoral endocrine cell proliferations or with signs of gastrin hypersecretion. Tumor cells were diffusely immunoreactive for chromogranin A and synaptophysin but usually negative for chromogranin B or HISL-19. Scattered serotonin cells were found in ten carcinoids. They were more frequent in infiltrating than in intramucosal tumors as were the less represented pancreatic polypeptide cells whereas the reverse was found for alpha-subunit-containing cells. These results are of relevance for tumor pathogenesis and may provide the rationale for a less aggressive therapeutic approach in the patients.
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PMID:Gastric carcinoids and their precursor lesions. A histologic and immunohistochemical study of 23 cases. 170 55

Ten adrenocortical carcinomas including two tumors with clinically detectable corticosteroid production, were immunohistochemically analyzed for their intermediate filament proteins, and for neuroendocrine markers. Keratins were present in 6 of 10, vimentin in all 10, and the 68 kilodalton kD neurofilament subunit protein in 6/10 tumors. Keratins numbers 8 and 18 were most prevalent, whereas only traces of keratins 19 and 7 were found. Eight tumors were positive for synaptophysin at least focally, and 3 showed extensive positivity in more than 30% of tumor cells. The tumors showed approximately similar levels of neuron-specific enolase (NSE) expression as judged by immunohistochemistry. Chromogranin was not detected, and there was no immunoreactivity for 3 neuropeptides (calcitonin, gastrin, somatostatin). In normal adrenal cortex, neuron-specific enolase, synaptophysin and neurofilaments were restricted to the nerves seen between the cortical cells. Electron microscopy revealed clusters of dense-core granules in 4 of 5 tumors, consistent with neuroendocrine granules. These results indicate that adrenocortical carcinomas may show signs of neuroendocrine differentiation and share some features with the adrenal medullary tumors.
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PMID:Neuroendocrine differentiation in adrenocortical carcinoma. New immunohistochemical findings supported by electron microscopy. 173 54

A large cystic tumor in the pancreatic body was found incidentally in an 85-yr-old male. A distal pancreatectomy was performed after a diagnosis of cystadenocarcinoma. Microscopic examination of the resected specimen revealed a pancreatic cystic endocrine tumor; however, this tumor produced no symptoms. Immunohistochemical studies of the tumor cells showed positivity for gastrin, neuron-specific enolase, chromogranin A, and synaptophysin, and two cell types of neurosecretory granules were recognized in electron-microscopic studies. Although endocrine tumors of the pancreas are usually solid and cystic change occurs only rarely, such tumors should be considered in the differential diagnosis of patients who have a cystic lesion in the pancreas.
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PMID:Cystic endocrine tumor of the pancreas. 175 31

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

Pulmonary blastoma is an infrequent malignant neoplasm, so called because of its resemblance to fetal lung. The original description outlined the components as variable mixtures of epithelial and stromal elements. More recently, a variant displaying almost exclusively epithelial differentiation has been described. We report our findings in a case of pulmonary blastoma with predominance of epithelial cells, forming tubular structures and large morules. The architectural arrangement of the morules was remarkably similar to normal bronchial neuroepithelial bodies. Moreover, their immunohistochemical profiles were also very similar, including the expression of cytokeratins, chromogranin, neuron-specific enolase, synaptophysin, gastrin, calcitonin, bombesin, somatostatin and serotonin.
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PMID:Pulmonary blastoma with neuroendocrine differentiation in cell morules resembling neuroepithelial bodies. 212 6

The nuclear DNA content of 17 pancreatic neuroendocrine tumors was measured from paraffin-embedded tissue with flow cytometry. The tumors were classified by immunostaining with antisera for synaptophysin, insulin, gastrin, glucagon, pancreatic polypeptide, somatostatin, and vasoactive intestinal polypeptide. Eight (47%) of the 17 tumors were aneuploid, and two (12%) were multiploid (had two aneuploid stemlines of cells). Seven of the eight insulinomas, one of the four gastrinomas, and two of the four nonspecified neuroendocrine tumors had an abnormal nuclear DNA content. The DNA indices of the aneuploid and multiploid cases ranged from 1.13 to 1.93, and three cases had a DNA index greater than 1.50. During the follow-up for up to 16 years (mean, 7 years), one patient with diploid nonspecified tumor died of the disease, another patient with a multiploid gastrinoma had metastatic disease develop, and a third patient with a multiploid nonspecified tumor was alive with the disease. The authors conclude that many neuroendocrine tumors of the pancreas have an abnormal nuclear DNA content as measured by DNA flow cytometry. DNA multiploid pancreatic neuroendocrine tumors may be associated with a less favorable clinical course, but this needs to be confirmed in additional studies.
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PMID:DNA ploidy in pancreatic neuroendocrine tumors. 234 35

Six pulmonary spindle cell carcinoids were reviewed. The patients were asymptomatic women ranging from 56 to 76 years of age. Four cases were diagnosed or suspected by percutaneous needle aspiration biopsy. The four patients treated by wedge resection or lobectomy showed no recurrence during the followup period; one patient was followed radiologically without resection for over five years, during which time the lesion remained stable. The cytologic preparations showed groups and single oval or elongated cells that had nuclei with finely granular, evenly dispersed chromatin, usually one small nucleolus and easily disrupted, finely granular cytoplasm. The histologic sections showed circumscribed or infiltrative neoplasms growing as sheets or vaguely organoid cell masses with vascular, focally hyalinized stroma. Immunoreactivity for chromogranin, neuron-specific enolase, synaptophysin, S-100 protein and Leu-7 was typically present; bombesin, serotonin, insulin and calcitonin were focally present in some cases. No reactivity for adrenocorticotropic hormone, somatostatin, gastrin, vasoactive intestinal polypeptide, pancreatic polypeptide, low-molecular-weight cytokeratin (MAK-6) or carcinoembryonic antigen was observed.
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PMID:Pulmonary spindle cell carcinoid. Needle aspiration biopsy, histologic and immunohistochemical findings. 240 75

A study of gangliocytic paragangliomas (GPs) of the gastrointestinal tract from 51 patients showed characteristic microscopic features: epithelioid cells with an endocrine growth pattern, spindle cells, and ganglion cells. Forty-nine tumors were located in the duodenum, 1 in the jejunum, and 1 in the pylorus. Twenty-one patients were female, 28 male, and for two the sex was unknown. The average age at presentation was 54 years (range, 23-83). No patient had a recurrence. No neuroendocrine syndrome was found in any patient or patient's family. Immunohistochemical stains in 33 cases yielded the following (proportion positive): S-100 protein 94%, synaptophysin 94%, neuron-specific enolase 94%, pancreatic polypeptide 88%, somatostatin 75%, chromogranin 72%, neurofilament protein 64%, keratin 52%, leu-enkephalin 48%, serotonin (one case), and gastrin (one case). Antisera usually stained one or two of the three major cell types. Pancreatic-type tissue was identified in or near 28 tumors, including the pyloric and jejunal lesions and two in the distal duodenum. The authors conclude that GP is benign; is not associated with endocrine syndromes; contains autonomic, neural, and endocrine cell types; and is related to pancreatic development.
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PMID:Gangliocytic paraganglioma. 275 Jul 1


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