Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UNIPROT:P04626 (erbB-2)
5,251 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Medullary thyroid carcinomas (MTC) are rare neoplasms derived from the calcitonin-producing thyroid parafollicular C-cells. Interestingly about 20% of cases are related to inherited tumor syndromes. As precursor lesion, C-cell hyperplasia can be detected in numerous MTCs. In our series of 6 patients with MTC, including 5 patients with adjacent C-cell hyperplasia, Her2/neu levels were immunohistochemically evaluated on formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded tissues using c-erbB-2/Her-2/neu Oncoprotein Ab-17 monoclonal antibody(mAb). Statistically, a highly significant correlation was found between high Her2/neu levels and extrathyroidal growth. C-cell hyperplasias always presented with higher amounts of stained cells than their corresponding invasive MTCs. Whereas in hyperplastic areas large stained cell clusters were found, the invasive tumors showed mainly single cells reacting in areas of variable size. These results present the impact of Her2/neu oncoprotein concerning development and biological behaviour, especially aggressive growth, of invasive MTCs and suggest a major role of hyperplastic C-cell areas in the development of these malignant tumors.
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PMID:Her2/neu expression in C-cell hyperplasia and medullary thyroid carcinomas. 1289 98

Neuroendocrine (NE) cells represent the third epithelial cell type on normal prostatic tissue (in addition to basal and secretory cells). They are localized in all regions of the human prostate at birth but rapidly decrease in the peripheral prostate after birth, and then reappear at puberty. After puberty, their number seems to increase until an apparently optimum level is reached, which persists between the age of 25 and 54. NE cells were defined by Pearse as APUD to refer to chemical characteristics of amine precursor uptake and decarboxylation, common to the cells of this system. The most predominant product of prostatic NE cells is Chromogranin A, but they also produce serotonin, CgB, secretogranin or CgC, thyroid-stimulating hormone-like peptide, calcitonin, katacalcin, PTHrP and a-human chorionic gonadotropin-like peptide. NE cells in normal and neoplastic prostates are devoid of androgen receptors, but they express epidermal growth factor (EGF) receptor and c-erbB-2. For these reason NE cells are androgen-insensitive. The NE component of prostate adenocarcinoma is resistant to hormone therapy; some studies showed that the number of NE tumor cells and CgA serum levels increase with the recovery of human prostate tumor from hormonal therapy. Currently there are no clinical data available to support an active role of radiotherapy in NE differentiation.
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PMID:[Role of neuroendocrine cells in prostate cancer progression]. 2157 45