Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UNIPROT:P04637 (p53)
77,613 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Factors that determine the clinical course and outcome of patients with gastrointestinal (GI) carcinoid tumors are complex and multifaceted. These include the site of origin within the GI tract, the size of the primary tumor, and the anatomical extent of disease, whether localized, regional, or metastatic to distant sites. The new World Health Organization (WHO) histological classification of endocrine tumors, including carcinoids, represents a significant advance in terms of providing a consistent framework for histopathological interpretation that should facilitate multicenter research on treatment outcomes. Histochemical indicators of a poorer prognosis are the degree of expression of the proliferation protein Ki-67 and the p53 tumor suppressor protein. Adverse clinical indicators are the malignant carcinoid syndrome, carcinoid heart disease, and high concentrations of the tumor markers, urinary 5-HIAA and plasma chromogranin A.
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PMID:Prognostic indicators for carcinoid neuroendocrine tumors of the gastrointestinal tract. 1571 76

Epithelial neoplasms of appendix are infrequent, and their pathological features are not fully characterized. We collected 33 cases of appendiceal tumors and examined immunohistochemically the expression of cytokeratins (CK, CK7, and CK20), mucin core protein (MUC1, MUC2, MUC5AC, and MUC6), E-cadherin, chromogranin A, and p53 protein. Gene analysis of TP53 was also conducted on exons 5 to 8. Clinically, mucinous tumors were predominant in females. Immunohistochemically, all the tumors expressed CK20, whereas CK7 was positive in one third of the cases. Similarly, MUC2 was expressed in all the tumors, whereas MUC1 and MUC5AC were detected in about a half of the cases. Although chromogranin A-positive cells are generally sparse in normal appendix, they were more common in mucinous tumors than in nonmucinous tumors. Contrary to the previous data reported (Mod Pathol 2002;15:599-605), mucinous carcinoma exhibited a higher frequency of p53-positive cells (mean 29%) compared with mucinous adenoma (2.8%) (P < .001), whereas nonmucinous tumors showed high levels of p53-positive cells to similar extent (51%-67%) in both adenoma and carcinoma. The high expression of p53 protein coincided with the presence of mutations in multiple sites of TP53 gene in mucinous tumors. This is the first report that characterized the immunophenotypic profile of appendiceal epithelial neoplasms with an emphasis of a higher frequency of p53 positivity in mucinous carcinoma cases compared with mucinous adenoma in the appendix.
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PMID:Immunohistochemical expressions of cytokeratins, mucin core proteins, p53, and neuroendocrine cell markers in epithelial neoplasm of appendix. 1626 Feb 76

Morphofunctional features of skin mast cells located in the areas subjected to chronic UV-radiation and in the associated basal cell carcinoma with photoinjure have been studied. Various immunohistochemical methods (chromogranin A, CDla, HLA-DR, CD35, Ki67, P53, Bcl-2, Mcl-1, involucrine) were used. It is found that chronic UV-damage leads to mast cell hyperplasia as well as activation of their synthetic, absorption and secretory functions. It is suggested that mast cell hyperplasia and increase of mast cells neuroendocrine activity provide a risk of basal cell carcinoma development.
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PMID:[Mast cells in photolesion of the skin and basal cell cancer associated with it]. 1632 76

Small cell carcinomas (SmCCs) of the uterine cervix are rare tumors. The knowledge regarding protein expression of several checkpoint candidates of cell cycle regulation is limited. Surgically treated SmCCs were selected from our files for immunohistochemical staining (neuroendocrine markers, p53, p16, p14, and cyclin D1). Polymerase chain reaction analysis, using general primers, was performed for human papillomavirus analysis. Nine of 677 tumors (1.3%) were classified as SmCCs after Grimelius staining (8/9 tumors positive) and immunohistochemical reaction against neurone-specific enolase, chromogranin A, synaptophysin (7/9 positive tumors), and CD 56 (8/9 positive tumors). All specimens were positive for at least two of the above. Two SmCCs were p53 positive and one case was p14 positive. Cyclin D1 staining was completely negative. All cases showed strong nuclear and/or cytoplasmic p16-immunostaining. Seven tumors represented human papillomavirus positivity for high-risk types. Four patients died of the tumor after a median time of 36.7 months (range, 15-56 months), representing a 5-year survival rate of 56%. The results suggest that p16 is up-regulated or accumulated in the SmCCs of the uterine cervix, probably caused by infection with human papillomavirus. p14 inactivation is of high prevalence in SmCCs and detection rate of p53 is similar to other histologic types of cervical carcinomas.
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PMID:p16, p14, p53, and cyclin D1 expression and HPV analysis in small cell carcinomas of the uterine cervix. 1699 Jul 21

Neuroendocrine (NE) differentiation in prostate cancer is typically detected by immunohistochemistry as single cells in conventional adenocarcinoma. Prostatic NE tumors, such as carcinoid or small cell carcinoma, are rare and large cell NE carcinoma (LCNEC) is described only in case reports. We identified 7 cases of LCNEC and compiled their clinicopathologic characteristics. In 6 cases, there was a history of adenocarcinoma treated with hormone therapy for a mean of 2.4 years (range: 2 to 3 y). The remaining case was de novo LCNEC. LCNEC was incidentally diagnosed in palliative transurethral resection specimens in 5 cases. The mean patient age at diagnosis with LCNEC was 67 years (range: 43 to 81 y). LCNEC comprised solid sheets and ribbons of cells with abundant pale to amphophilic cytoplasm, large nuclei with coarse chromatin and prominent nucleoli along with brisk mitotic activity and foci of necrosis. In 6 cases, there were foci of admixed adenocarcinoma, 4 of which showed hormone therapy effects. LCNEC was strongly positive for CD56, CD57, chromogranin A, synaptophysin, and P504S/alpha methylacyl CoA racemase. There was strong bcl-2 overexpression, expression of MIB1, and p53 in >50% of nuclei, focally positive staining for prostate specific antigen and prostatic acid phosphatase and negative androgen receptor staining. Follow-up was available for 6 patients, all of who died with metastatic disease at mean of 7 months (range: 3 to 12 mo) after platinum-based chemotherapy. LCNEC of prostate is a distinct clinicopathologic entity that typically manifests after long-term hormonal therapy for prostatic adenocarcinoma and likely arises through clonal progression under the selection pressure of therapy.
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PMID:Large cell neuroendocrine carcinoma of prostate: a clinicopathologic summary of 7 cases of a rare manifestation of advanced prostate cancer. 1672 45

Non-mass forming, neoplastic intraepithelial proliferations (dysplasia) represent the most well-accepted precursor lesions to gallbladder adenocarcinomas. They are typically small, localized, grossly unrecognizable lesions that have been identified in the epithelium adjacent to up to 79% of gallbladder adenocarcinomas. Morphologic variants that have been reported include flat, micropapillary, papillary and cribriform. We have recently encountered a morphologically distinctive, previously unreported lesion to which we have applied the designation eosinophilic dysplasia. This lesion was identified in a gallbladder with diffuse mural fibrosis and calcification (porcelain gallbladder). The dysplastic focus was confined to one tissue section, and was comprised of a localized true papilla [i.e with a fibrovascular core], measuring approximately 1.2 mm in greatest dimension and an adjacent, flat, 7-cell epithelial segment. These foci were lined by cells displaying significant nuclear enlargement [1.5-4 times the adjacent benign cells], nuclear pleomorphism, occasional multinucleation, hyperchromasia and nuclear membrane irregularities. Nucleoli were present but inconspicuous. These cells also showed voluminous eosinophilic to granular cytoplasm, such that the overall nuclear-to-cytoplasmic ratio was generally not increased. The cells displayed diffuse and marked nuclear immunoreactivity for p53, and approximately 70% of the cells showed nuclear positivity for Ki-67. The cells were also positive for cytokeratin 7 and were entirely negative for carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA) and chromogranin A. The cells of the adjacent normal epithelium were positive for cytokeratin 7 and CEA, negative for p53 and chromogranin A and showed a Ki-67 labeling index of <10%. Marked overexpression of the p53 protein as well as its high proliferative index are strong arguments in favor of the dysplastic nature of this lesion. However, further studies are required to elucidate its true clinical significance and to determine whether or not its association with a porcelain gallbladder, as noted herein, is entirely fortuitous. However, such studies can only be performed with an increased recognition by practitioners of this distinctive variant.
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PMID:Eosinophilic dysplasia of the gallbladder: a hitherto undescribed variant identified in association with a "porcelain" gallbladder. 1687 48

The article reports the clinical, histopathological, and immunohistochemical findings of a 1-year-old boy presenting with isosexual pseudoprecocity attributable to a functioning Leydig cell tumor of the testis. The case appears to represent the youngest patient ever recognized with this well-known syndrome. Malignancy features were also for the first time initially assessed using criteria, retrospectively developed from the literature, for metastasizing Leydig cell tumor. All the following were found: infiltrative borders, cellular pleomorphism, high mitotic index (12-14/high-power field), high MIB-1 index (40%), P53 positivity in 50% of the cells, and bcl-2 positivity in 15% of the cells. Immunohistochemistry proved the cells of the tumor to be positive for inhibin, Melan-A, synaptophysin, cytokeratin, and calretinin and negative for S-100 and chromogranin A. Notably, lipochrome and crystals of Reinke were not found in the tumor cells. Although the neoplasm fulfilled the criteria for a potentially metastasizing Leydig cell tumor, there was no evidence of that event having occurred, perhaps as a result of early treatment or as indication that criteria developed for Leydig cell tumor of adults may not apply to children.
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PMID:Leydig cell tumor of the testis with histological and immunohistochemical features of malignancy in a 1-year-old boy with isosexual pseudoprecocity. 1704 Dec 5

Recently, we have shown that prostate epithelium-specific deficiency for p53 and Rb tumor suppressors leads to metastatic cancer, exhibiting features of both luminal and neuroendocrine differentiation. Using stage-by-stage evaluation of carcinogenesis in this model, we report that all malignant neoplasms arise from the proximal region of the prostatic ducts, the compartment highly enriched for prostatic stem/progenitor cells. In close similarity to reported properties of prostatic stem cells, the cells of the earliest neoplastic lesions express stem cell marker stem cell antigen 1 and are not sensitive to androgen withdrawal. Like a subset of normal cells located in the proximal region of prostatic ducts, the early neoplastic cells coexpress luminal epithelium markers cytokeratin 8, androgen receptor, and neuroendocrine markers synaptophysin and chromogranin A. Inactivation of p53 and Rb also takes place in the lineage-committed transit-amplifying and/or differentiated cells of the distal region of the prostatic ducts. However, the resulting prostatic intraepithelial neoplasms never progress to carcinoma by the time of mouse death. Interestingly, in an ectopic transplantation assay, early mutant cells derived from either region of the prostatic ducts are capable of forming neoplasms within 3 months. These findings indicate that p53 and Rb are critically important for the regulation of the prostatic stem cell compartment, the transformation in which may lead to particularly aggressive cancers in the context of microenvironment.
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PMID:Prostate cancer associated with p53 and Rb deficiency arises from the stem/progenitor cell-enriched proximal region of prostatic ducts. 1755

Here, we report the case of patient with multiple gastric carcinoids showing histopathological behavior similar to that of type I carcinoid tumors of the stomach. The patient was a 61-year-old man diagnosed as having a gastric tumor, which was revealed by follow-up computed tomography. Upper gastrointestinal endoscopy revealed a protruded tumor in the greater curvature and a small polyp in the anterior wall of the upper stomach. A biopsy revealed gastric carcinoid. Because he refused to be operated for gastric carcinoid, upper gastrointestinal endoscopy was performed 5 months later. A malignant transformation of the gastric carcinoid was strongly suspected. Therefore, the patient was admitted for operation. Laboratory findings were normal. With the diagnosis of type III gastric carcinoid, total gastrectomy was performed. Microscopic examination revealed that the carcinoid tumor was confined to the submucosa and that the small polyp mentioned earlier was also a carcinoid. Microcarcinoids and numerous enterochromaffin-like cell hyperplasias were observed along the muscularis propria of the fundus. The tumor differed from typical type I gastric carcinoids in several ways. Immunohistochemical staining for chromogranin A, synaptophysin, and cytokeratin was positive. However, p53 was absent, and the MIB-1 index was low. Two years after surgery, the patient is alive without recurrence.
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PMID:A case of multiple gastric carcinoids that could not be preoperatively diagnosed. 1808 38

We present the surgical and pathological findings and follow-up of 5 women diagnosed with combined endometrioid and high-grade neuroendocrine carcinoma of large cell type (LCNEC) arising in the endometrium. The mean age of the women was 75 years (range, 50-88 years). Of the 5 tumors, 4 formed polypoid endometrial masses associated with extensive lymphovascular involvement of the myometrium by neoplastic cells. A single endometrial tumor was formed by LCNEC alone, and 4 tumors were composite with varying proportions formed by endometrioid (4/5) and small cell neuroendocrine carcinoma (1/5). In all 5 LCNEC tumor components, an insular growth pattern was noted, whereas a diffuse (solid) pattern was found in 4 tumors, a trabecular in 2, and rosettes/pseudorosettes in another 2. In all 5 tumors, the LCNEC tumor components were labeled with neuron-specific enolase (NSE). Four tumors were reactive for chromogranin A, CAM 5.2, and p53. Three tumors were labeled for AE1/AE3, CD56 (NCAM), p16, and cytokeratin 7. Synaptophysin was reactive in 2 tumors, and CD117 was found in only a single tumor. Of the 3 endometrioid tumor components examined, all were reactive for NSE. Two tumors were reactive for p16 and p53, 1 for CD56, but none for synaptophysin orchromogranin A. We conclude that LCNEC of the endometrium is a distinct clinicopathological entity with a poor prognosis irrespective of stage. The gross and histomorphological features are often suggestive, but confirmation requires immunoperoxidases, including NSE, synaptophysin, chromogranin A, p16, and p53. Combined endometrioid and high-grade LCNEC possess more characteristics of a type II than a type I endometrial carcinoma.
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PMID:Combined large cell neuroendocrine and endometrioid carcinoma of the endometrium. 1815 75


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