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Query: UNIPROT:P04637 (
p53
)
77,613
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The
p53
expression in various skin tumors was immunohistologically evaluated using two mouse monoclonal anti-
p53
antibodies, PAb421 and PAb1801. The
p53
expression was not detected in the normal epidermal cells. Nuclear staining suggested that the
p53
expression was observed in 10 of 26 squamous cell carcinomas (SCCs) from 24 patients, in one undifferentiated carcinoma, one proliferating trichilemmal cyst, one malignant proliferating trichilemmal tumor and in one metastatic carcinoma of breast cancer. None off four cases of Bowen's disease (SCC in situ) showed nuclear staining. In the SCCs, five of 20 primary lesions, three of four recurrent lesions and both of two metastatic lesions had positive nuclei. There was one case of SCC in which a primary lesion was negative but a recurrent lesion was positive. Thus,
p53
expression was more frequently observed in SCCs at more clinically advanced stages. This may suggest that
p53
has some relevance to progression of SCC. Nuclear staining was not detected in any of the following cases: two cases of seborrheic keratosis, one eccrine poroma, one keratoacanthoma, 11 basal cell epitheliomas, two mammary
Paget's disease
, three genital
Paget's disease
, one sebaceous carcinoma, four malignant melanomas, six lymphomas, two leukemia cutis and two angiosarcomas.
...
PMID:Immunohistological analysis of P53 expression in human skin tumors. 830 55
Immunophenotypes of mammary (MPD) and extramammary
Paget's disease
(EPD) are still not well understood. Thirty-four formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded tissue sections from 33 patients with 6 MPD and 28 EPD were studied immunohistochemically with the use of polyclonal c-erbB-2 and pS2 antisera, and monoclonal nm23, B6.2, GCDFP-15, and
p53
antibodies. Cases of MPD expressed a high incidence of c-erbB-2 and nm23 compared with those of EPD (100% vs. 29%; p < 0.01, and 83% vs. 29%; p < 0.05, respectively). Although high expression of B6.2 (> 83%) and moderate expression of GCDFP-15 (33-39%), pS2 (33-46%) and
p53
(39-50%) were seen, the positivity was not significantly different between MPD and EPD. These findings indicate that MPD and EPD share immunohistochemical features but partially differ in their patterns of antigen expression.
...
PMID:Immunohistochemical study of mammary and extramammary Paget's disease. 776 23
Mutation of the
p53
gene and increased levels of
p53 protein
are among the most frequent alterations in human cancers. To date, very little is known about the mechanisms underlying the development of sweat gland carcinomas. In this study, we analyzed 43 benign and 39 malignant sweat gland tumors for
p53 protein
level using the antibody PAB1801. Nine (23%) of 39 sweat gland carcinomas were positive for
p53 protein
. Among these carcinomas, six of 12 cases of extramammary
Paget's disease
were positive using immunohistochemistry. No other correlation between tumor subtype and
p53
reactivity was detected. Among 43 benign sweat gland tumors, only one case displayed staining for
p53
. We conclude that
p53 protein
plays a role in a subset of sweat gland tumors, especially in extramammary
Paget's disease
.
...
PMID:p53 protein in benign and malignant sweat gland tumors. 860 Aug 14
A case of extramammary
Paget's disease
of the axilla in an 84-year-old patient is presented. No underlying carcinoma was found and the lesion was treated successfully by wide local excision. Immunohistochemical staining showed nuclear immunoreactivity for c-myc and cytoplasmic staining for CEA, EMA, CAM 5.2, EGRF, c-erbB-2 and pan-cytokeratin in all the Paget cells. No immunoreactivity of the lesion was observed for S-100 protein, pan-ras, H-ras, K-ras, and
p53
oncoproteins. Further research is needed to establish whether oncoprotein overexpression plays a role in the pathogenesis of extramammary
Paget's disease
and can be used as a diagnostic or prognostic marker.
...
PMID:Extramammary Paget's disease of the axilla. 807 May 99
p53
is a tumour-suppressor gene, mutations of which are found in malignant skin lesions. We studied the immunohistochemical expression of the (mutated)
p53 protein
in 17 cases of
Paget's disease
(12 mammary and 5 extramammary). Four of the mammary specimens (33.3%) expressed
p53
within Paget's cells; in one of these an underlying ductal adenocarcinoma was present and this was also
p53
-positive. All extramammary cases proved
p53
-negative. These results underline the differences that exist between mammary and extramammary
Paget's disease
and favour the origin of the former from the underlying adenocarcinoma rather than the surface epithelium.
...
PMID:p53 protein expression in mammary and extramammary Paget's disease. 813 79
Extramammary Paget's disease is a particular form of skin cancer of unknown histogenesis. To look for the genetic defects underlying the pathogenesis of this tumour, we have examined loss of heterozygosity (LOH),
p53
and human papillomavirus (HPV) status, and the expression of c-erbB-2 and bcl-2 proteins in 14 cases. Unexpectedly, no LOH was detected at several loci commonly lost in other human cancers (namely 3p, 9p, 9q, 13q, 16q, 17p, and 17q) in 12 tumours examined. Altered
p53 protein
expression was entirely or mostly negative in all 14 cases. Direct sequencing of exons 5-8 of the
p53
gene in eight cases revealed no mutation. Polymerase chain reaction amplification of the L1 gene of human papillomavirus (HPV) did not detect the virus that could inactivate
p53
and retinoblastoma tumour-suppressor gene products. As expected, c-erbB-2 proto-oncogene protein was overexpressed in six cases. The expression of bcl-2 was negative in all cases. The results presented in this study suggest that molecular events underlying extramammary
Paget's disease
differ from those of other common epithelial malignancies and that tumour-suppressor genes located in chromosome regions not examined in this study may be important.
...
PMID:Tumour cells of extramammary Paget's disease do not show either p53 mutation or allelic loss at several selected loci implicated in other cancers. 932 50
Our previous study in extramammary
Paget's disease
showed neither
p53
mutations nor allelic loss at selected loci implicated in other cancers, suggesting a pathogenesis of this skin cancer different from other common epithelial malignancies. To examine further the genetic defects in extramammary
Paget's disease
, we carried out molecular genetic analyses in 31 tumor samples obtained from 27 cases of extramammary
Paget's disease
without underlying malignancies. Immunohistochemistry using CB-11 monoclonal antibody revealed either membrane or cytoplasmic erbB-2 oncoprotein overexpression in none of the 13 primary in situ tumors, but in one recurrent in situ tumor, 10 of 13 invasive primary tumors and two of four lymph node metastases. Sensitive dual color fluorescence in situ hybridization analysis using probes for erbB-2 gene locus and chromosome 17 pericentromere, however, revealed different erbB-2 gene status in the erbB-2 overexpressing tumors. One recurrent in situ tumor and one lymph node metastasis showed definite gene amplification characterized by multiple scattered signals or a few large clustered erbB-2 signals, whereas four tumors with predominantly cytoplasmic erbB-2 overexpression were thought to have low-grade gene amplification. The remaining six tumors overexpressing erbB-2 showed no increase of erbB-2 copy numbers. No evidence of abnormal activation of the beta-catenin gene, a critical mediator of Wnt signaling pathway, in any tumor by immunohistochemical staining and by direct sequencing and reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction analysis was found. Frequent overexpression of erbB-2 by either gene amplification or possible transcriptional activation in invasive primary tumors and metastases suggests an important part for this oncogene in the progression of extramammary
Paget's disease
.
...
PMID:erbB-2 overexpression but no activation of beta-Catenin gene in extramammary Paget's disease. 1046 13
Twenty-one cases of vulvar
Paget's disease
were studied to assess possible prognostic indicators, including presence and depth of invasion, status of resection margins, tumor DNA cell content, and immunoreactivity for
p53
and estrogen receptor proteins. Immunostaining for cytokeratin 7 (CK7), cytokeratin 20 (CK20), and gross cystic disease fluid protein-15 (GCDFP) were also performed. Patients were 45 to 82 years of age (mean, 66.9 years). Ten of 21 patients (47.6%) had invasive
Paget's disease
. Dermal invasion was < or = 1 mm in 7 of 10 cases and 2 mm, 3 mm, and 8 mm in the remaining three invasive tumors. Of the seven patients with minimally invasive
Paget's disease
(< or = 1 mm depth of invasion), five are alive with no evidence of disease, one died of an unrelated illness, and one is alive with biopsy-proven in situ
Paget's disease
, having refused operative treatment. Of the three patients with more than minimally invasive
Paget's disease
(> 1 mm), all had nodal metastases; one patient is alive with no evidence of disease, one died of undertermined causes, and one died of metastatic
Paget's disease
. The remaining 11 patients had
Paget's disease
confined to the epidermis and its adnexal structures. Seven of these patients were alive at last follow-up with no evidence of disease. Of the remaining four patients, one died of metastatic cervical cancer, one died of metastatic bladder cancer, one died of an unrelated illness, and one patient is alive with biopsy-proven in situ
Paget's disease
and awaiting operative treatment. Twenty of the 21 cases represented primary vulvar
Paget's disease
while one represented possible local spread from a cervical adenocarcinoma. The immunoprofiles were GCDFP+/CK7+/CK20- in 14 cases, GCDFP+/CK7+/CK20+ in 4 cases, and GCDFP-/CK7+/CK20- in 2 cases. All tumors were estrogen receptor-negative. Immunostaining for
p53
was positive in 16 tumors and negative in four tumors. Seven of 12 (58%) patients with positive margins experienced local recurrence of
Paget's disease
, while the disease recurred in 1 of 4 patients with negative margins. Recurrence was observed in 3 of 5 patients with diploid tumors and in 4 of 10 patients with aneuploid tumors. Neither of these differences is statistically significant. This study supports the recognition of a category of minimally invasive vulvar
Paget's disease
that has a low risk of distant metastasis and death caused by disease. Status of surgical resection margins, tumor cell DNA ploidy, estrogen receptor expression, and
p53
immunoreactivity are not predictive of local recurrence.
...
PMID:Prognostic factors in Paget's disease of the vulva: a study of 21 cases. 1054 44
We describe a very rare association between intraepithelial, extramammary
Paget's disease
and human papillomavirus- (HPV) negative, keratinized type of VIN III observed in two elderly women. In both cases, morphological and immunohistochemical investigation showed two heterogeneous but intimately admixed neoplastic populations of vulvar epithelium. Atypical keratinocytes stained markedly and diffusely positive for high molecular weight cytokeratins, and moderately for
p53 protein
and c-erbB-2 immunostainings. Paget cells were diffusely positive for CEA, EMA, and low molecular weight cytokeratins, moderately and focally for c-erbB-2 and (in one case) for S-100. Morphological and immunohistochemical phenotypic differences between Paget cells and atypical keratinocytes suggest a simultaneous and incidental association of two distinct neoplastic disorders more than a mixed carcinoma in situ of vulvar epithelium.
...
PMID:Simultaneous vulvar intraepithelial neoplasia and Paget's disease: report of two cases. 1143 29
To identify cancer-related genes that are involved in the carcinogenesis of extramammary
Paget's disease
(EMPD), we compared mRNA expression profiles of EMPD lesions and corresponding normal skin using cDNA array. Sixty-eight genes were highly expressed (>5-fold) in EMPD lesions compared to normal skin, and 40 genes were expressed less than one-fifth in EMPD lesions. Among them, PIG7/LITAF mRNA was overexpressed in 3 of 4 EMPD cases. PIG7/LITAF transcription is induced by
p53
expression and has been implicated in the
p53
-induced apoptotic pathway. Since expression of
p53 mRNA
and
p53 protein
was not high in any of the 3 EMPD samples compared to the intact skin of the same patient, we analyzed PIG7/LITAF cDNA mutations among 12 EMPD samples (including the former 4) by PCR-SSCP. Three samples showed shifted bands (2 had point mutations leading to amino acid substitutions and 1 had a silent mutation). One sample with amino acid substitution overexpressed PIG7/LITAF mRNA in cDNA array analysis and RT-PCR. PIG7/LITAF mRNA expression is confined to tumor cells in in situ mRNA hybridization analysis. These results indicate that genetic disorder and overexpression of PIG7/LITAF may be involved in EMPD carcinogenesis.
...
PMID:PIG7/LITAF gene mutation and overexpression of its gene product in extramammary Paget's disease. 1519 74
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