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Query: UNIPROT:P04637 (
p53
)
77,613
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The inhibitor of apoptosis protein survivin has been implicated in both cell cycle control and apoptosis resistance. To discriminate between these different roles, we used transgenic expression of survivin in the skin as a model for cell proliferation, differentiation, and apoptosis. Transgenic mice expressing survivin under the control of a
keratin
-14 promoter developed normally, without histologic abnormalities of the skin or hair, epidermal hyperplasia, or developmental abnormalities of basal or suprabasal epidermis. Keratinocyte proliferation assessed under basal conditions, or after ultraviolet-B (UVB) irradiation, or phorbol ester stimulation was unchanged in survivin transgenic mice. In contrast, survivin expression inhibited UVB-induced apoptosis in vitro and in vivo (i.e., sunburn cell formation), whereas it did not affect Fas-induced cell death. When crossed with
p53
knockout mice, transgenic expression of survivin in a
p53
(+/-) background substituted for the loss of a second
p53
allele and further inhibited UVB-induced apoptosis. These data provide the first in vivo evidence that survivin inhibits apoptosis and suggest that this pathway may oppose the elimination of cancerous cells by
p53
.
...
PMID:Transgenic expression of survivin in keratinocytes counteracts UVB-induced apoptosis and cooperates with loss of p53. 1158 Dec 97
The epithelial ovarian carcinomas arise in the ovarian surface epithelium (OSE) which is the mesothelial covering of the ovary. Studies of human USE have been hampered by the small amounts and limited lifespan of this epithelium in culture. OSE cells expressing SV40 large T antigen (Tag) or the HPV genes E6 and E7 have increased growth potentials but lack some of the normal characteristics of OSE. In this study, we used conditional SV40 Tag expression to produce OSE cells with increased proliferative potentials but relatively normal phenotypes. Primary OSE cultures from three women, one of whom had a BRCA1 mutation, were infected with a temperature-sensitive Tag construct (tsTag), and from these, 28 monoclonal and four polyclonal lines were isolated. The effects of temperature changes were examined in two monoclonal and two polyclonal lines. At the permissive temperature (34 degrees C), these cell lines underwent 52-71 population doublings (PD) compared to 15-20 PD for normal OSE. Nuclear SV40-Tag and
p53
expression, demonstrated by immunofluorescence, showed that tsTag was uniformly present and biologically active in all lines. At 34 degrees C, culture morphologies ranged from epithelial to mesenchymal. The mean percentage of cells expressing the epithelial differentiation marker,
keratin
. varied between lines from 20 to 97%. Collagen type III, a mesenchymal marker expressed by OSE in response to explantation into culture, was present in 24-43% of cells. At 39 degrees C, tsTag was inactivated by 2 d while nuclear
p53
staining diminished to control levels over 2 wk. Over 3 d. the cells assumed more epithelial morphologies,
keratin
expression reached 85-100% in all lines and collagen expression increased significantly in two lines. The cultures with the BRCA1 mutation expressed the most
keratin
and the least collage n III at both temperatures. As indicated by beta-galactosidase staining at pH 6.0, changes leading to senescence were initiated at 39 degrees C by 6 h and were present in all cells after 24 h. However, the cells underwent 1-3 population doublings over up to 1 wk before growth arrest and widespread cell death, thus providing an experimental system where large numbers of OSE cells with different genetic backgrounds and growth potentials can be studied without the concurrent influence of Tag.
...
PMID:Differentiation and growth potential of human ovarian surface epithelial cells expressing temperature-sensitive SV40 T antigen. 1166 85
Human oral squamous cell carcinoma cell lines (KOSCC-11, -25A, -25B, -25C, -25D, -25E, -33A, and -33B) were established by explantation culture from these oral squamous cell carcinomas. The histopathology of the primary tumors, in vitro growth characteristics, epithelial origin, in vitro anchorage-independency, in vivo tumorigenicity, the frequency of human papillomavirus (HPV) infections, and the status of proto-oncogenes, tumor suppressor genes, DNA mismatch repair genes, and microsatellite instability were investigated in the cell lines. KOSCC-11 is a well-differentiated oral squamous cell carcinoma (OSCC) derived from mandibular gingiva. KOSCC-25A, -25B, -25C, -25D, and -25E cell lines were derived from the same OSCC. KOSCC-33A and -33B were established from the same tumor that originated from the maxillary sinus. All tumor lines studied grew as monolayers and showed: i) epithelial origin by the presence of desmosome and
keratin
; ii) in vitro anchorage-independent growth ability; and iii) tumorigenic potential in nude mice. The cancer cell lines did not contain HPV DNA and did not express viral genes. Northern blot analysis revealed: i) overexpression of EGFR in four cell lines, ii) overexpression of c-H-ras in four cell lines, iii) overexpression of c-myc in three cell lines, iv) decreased expression of TGF-alpha in seven cell lines, and v) decreased expression of c-jun in five cancer cell lines compared with normal human oral keratinocytes. In all KOSCC cell lines and their corresponding tumor tissues, mutations were identified in highly-conserved functional regions of the
p53
gene. The KOSCC-11 cell line contained a frameshift mutation and the other cell lines harbored an identical
p53
mutation at codon 175 from CGC (Arg) to CTC (Leu). In five cell lines, a significant reduction of p21WAF1/Cip1 protein was evident. Cancer cell lines expressed higher level of Rb protein than normal human oral keratinocytes. DCC, a tumor suppressor gene, was not detected in KOSCC-25C. The KOSCC-33A cell line displayed microsatellite instability and showed a loss of hMSH2 expression. These well-characterized human OSCC cell lines should serve as useful tools for understanding the biological characteristics of oral cancer.
...
PMID:Characterization of novel cell lines established from three human oral squamous cell carcinomas. 1201 92
Pituitary carcinomas are only defined by their metastatic growth, which may be intracranial or systemic. To establish further morphological and immunohistochemical differences between pituitary carcinomas and adenomas, 19 ACTH-secreting adenomas (10 non invasive and 9 invasive) and 2 ACTH-secreting carcinomas with their metastases were studied for expression of the intermediate filaments
keratin
and vimentin and the tumor-associated antigens Ki67, proliferating cell nuclear antigen (PCNA), epidermal growth factor (EGF), cathepsin D,
p53
, and carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA). Immunohistochemistry was performed using avidin-biotin techniques on formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded tissue. With the exception of one noninvasive pituitary adenoma, one carcinoma, and the metastases, all tumors contained
keratin
; none contained vimentin. All tumors stained negative for CEA and
p53
. Eleven (58.5%) adenomas and both pituitary carcinomas contained Ki67-positive nuclei; 14 (74%) adenomas and one carcinoma revealed PCNA. No correlation was found between the two markers. Seven (38%) adenomas showed a labeling index <1 % for cathepsin D, whereas none of the carcinomas or metastases did so. EGF was found in 7 (38%) adenomas and in both carcinomas. A tendency to a higher rate of EGF positivity in the invasive adenomas was observed. The metastases showed a higher labeling index, and far more intense staining results for Ki67, PCNA, and EGF than the primary tumor. The metastases also had a higher proliferation rate and growth factor content than the carcinoma itself.
...
PMID:Proliferation Markers and EGF in ACTH-Secreting Adenomas and Carcinomas of the Pituitary. 1211 89
Carcinoma cuniculatum is a rare variant of carcinoma usually involving the foot. Only 13 cases have been described in the oral cavity, none of which was in the English-language literature. We describe a 56-year-old man who presented with a soft exophytic mass in the maxillary gingiva, alveolar bone destruction, and loosening of the teeth. Histopathologic study revealed thin papillary projections covered by a thick
keratin
layer in the superficial areas and multiple, branching
keratin
-filled crypts surrounded by well-differentiated squamous epithelium with only mild cytologic atypia but frequent mitosis. Immunohistochemistry results of
p53
and polymerase chain reaction analyses for human papillomavirus 6, 11, 16, and 18 DNA were negative. The diagnosis was carcinoma cuniculatum of the jaw. The literature on this unusual oral pathosis is reviewed and the diagnostic challenge described. We suggest that carcinoma cuniculatum may sometimes be misdiagnosed as squamous cell carcinoma or verrucous carcinoma and, therefore, might be more prevalent than the small number of published cases implies.
...
PMID:Carcinoma cuniculatum of the jaw: a rare variant of oral carcinoma. 1242 55
Incidentally detected adrenal tumors are a common finding during abdominal ultrasonography, computed tomography, and magnetic resonance imaging. Although most of these lesions are benign adenomas, adrenocortical carcinomas and metastases constitute 5% to 10% of all tumors. Adrenal biopsy may be helpful, but its diagnostic value is controversial and disputed, and prospective studies have not yet been performed. Therefore, the diagnostic accuracy of adrenal core biopsy was evaluated in a prospective multicenter study involving 8 surgical centers in Germany and Austria. A total of 220 biopsies from surgical specimens of the adrenal gland were punctured in an ex vivo approach and processed for pathohistologic diagnosis using paraffin sections, routine staining, and immunohistochemistry (
keratin
KL1, vimentin, S100 protein, chromogranin A, synaptophysin, neuron-specific enolase, D11, MiB-1, and
p53 protein
). The evaluating pathologist was blinded for clinical data from the patients. A total of 89 adrenal adenomas (40.5%), 22 adrenal carcinomas (10.0%), 55 pheochromocytomas (25.0%), 15 metastases (6.8%), 16 adrenal hyperplasias (7.2%), and 23 other tumors (10.5%) were studied. Nine cases were excluded due to incomplete data (n = 2) or insufficient biopsy specimen (n = 7). In the remaining 211 tumors, compared with the final diagnoses of the surgical specimen, bioptic diagnoses were absolutely correct in 76.8% of the cases, nearly correct in 13.2% of the cases, and incorrect in 10% of the cases. Pheochromocytomas were correctly diagnosed in 96% of the cases, cortical adenomas were correctly or nearly correctly reported in 91% of the cases, cortical carcinomas were correctly or nearly correctly reported in 76% of the cases, and metastases were correctly or nearly correctly reported in 77% of the cases. Of the 39 malignant lesions, only 4 were misclassified, 2 as benign and 2 as possibly malignant. This resulted in an overall sensitivity for malignancy of 94.6% and specificity of 95.3%. Our findings suggest that adrenal core biopsy is a useful method for identifying and classifying adrenal tumorous lesions if sufficient biopsy specimens can be obtained. However, in clinical practice it remains to be shown whether the benefits of biopsy outweigh the risks of the procedure.
...
PMID:High diagnostic accuracy of adrenal core biopsy: results of the German and Austrian adrenal network multicenter trial in 220 consecutive patients. 1261 87
Invasive cervical cancer remains a leading cause of morbidity and mortality, especially among women in the developing world where screening is either deficient or absent. Of all agents linked to the causation of this disease, high-risk human papillomavirus (HPV) appears to be the strongest factor. However, not all women with HPV develop cervical cancer. Steroid contraception has been postulated to be one mechanism whereby HPV exerts its tumorigenic effect on cervical tissue. Steroids are thought to bind to specific DNA sequences within transcriptional regulatory regions on the HPV DNA to either increase or suppress transcription of various genes. Although some earlier studies were reassuring as no increased incidence of cervical cancer was observed, subsequent research has shown a causative association, especially among long-term users. The role of steroids was further enhanced by the discovery of hormone receptors in cervical tissue. Some earlier studies of oral contraceptive steroids found no increased risk, even after controlling for other risk factors, including smoking and number of partners. However, prospective studies have shown a greater progression of dysplasia to carcinoma-in-situ with more than 6 years of oral steroid contraceptive use. Similar findings were also evident from other work, including the Royal College of General Practitioners Oral Contraception Study. The WHO Collaborative Study of Neoplasia and Steroid Contraceptives showed a relative risk of 1.2 for invasive cancer in users of the long-acting progestational contraceptive, depo-medroxyprogesterone acetate. However, in users of more than 5 years duration, an estimate of 2.4 was reported. The upstream regulatory region (URR) of the HPV type 16 viral genome, mediates transcriptional control of the HPV genome and is thought to contain enhancer elements that are activated by steroid hormones. It has been shown that steroid hormones bind to specific glucorticoid-response elements within HPV-DNA. Experimental evidence has revealed that high-risk type HPV 16 are able to stimulate the development of vaginal and cervical squamous cell carcinomas in transgenic mice exposed to slow-release pellets of 17 beta-estradiol in the presence of human
keratin
-14 promoter. Squamous cell carcinomas developed in a multi-stage pathway only in transgenic mice and not in nontransgenic mice. The E6 oncoprotein of HPV 16 has been shown to bind to the
p53 tumor suppressor
gene and stimulate its degradation by a ubiquitin-dependent protease system. Steroid hormones are thought to increase the expression of the E6 and E7 HPV 16 oncogenes, which in turn bind to and degrade the
p53
gene product, leading to apoptotic failure and carcinogenesis. However, the molecular basis of this remains to be proven.
...
PMID:The role of steroid contraceptive hormones in the pathogenesis of invasive cervical cancer: a review. 1265 8
We report a case of biliary adenofibroma in a 47-year-old woman, who presented with right upper quadrant pain for several months. Abdominal imaging revealed a 16-cm solid and cystic mass in the left hepatic lobe. Histologically, the tumor showed two distinct components: 1) cystic and tubular structures lined by low columnar to cuboidal biliary-type epithelium, and 2) a dense fibrous stroma composed of spindle-shaped cells with only mild nuclear pleomorphism and inconspicuous nucleoli. Mitoses and stromal invasion were absent. The glandular epithelium stained positively for
keratin
AE.3/Cam 5.2, cytokeratin 7, cytokeratin 19, carcinoembryonic antigen, and epithelial membrane antigen and had a low Ki-67 proliferative index. In addition, the epithelium was positive for D10 but did not stain for 1F6 or acid mucin with alcian blue stain. This staining pattern, similar to bile duct hamartoma (von Meyenburg complex) with which this tumor shares morphologic similarity, suggests that biliary adenofibroma originates from interlobular or larger bile ducts. Three years after a subtotal resection no metastasis or significant tumor growth was noted. However, given the marked nuclear
p53
immunoreactivity and tetraploidy status observed in this tumor, we cannot exclude that biliary adenofibroma may represent a premalignant process that warrants complete resection and thorough histopathologic examination.
...
PMID:Biliary adenofibroma: a rare neoplasm of bile duct origin with an indolent behavior. 1271 55
Pre-brachytherapy biopsies and post-brachytherapy oesophagectomy specimens of 10 patients with early squamous cell carcinoma of the middle third of the oesophagus were examined for the expression of
p53
, bcl-2 and apoptosis using immunohistochemical markers. There was no expression of
p53
in one patient in both pre- and post-brachytherapy specimens. In 8 patients,
p53
staining was strongly positive (3+) with approximately 50% or more cells, and with diffuse and no specific pattern in the pre-brachytherapy biopsies. The tumour areas of the post-brachytherapy specimens of this group showed strong 3+ positivity with
p53
(10-50% positive cell count), with the pattern being focal and peripheral in the tumour islands. The centre of the tumour islands showed necrosis and/or keratinisation. In one patient, the pre-brachytherapy biopsy showed expression of
p53
while the post-brachytherapy specimen was negative. bcl-2 expression in both pre- and post-brachytherapy was equivocal and inconclusive in both the pre- and post-brachytherapy specimens. Apoptosis was negative in all the pre- and post-brachytherapy tissue sections in the presence of positive controls. Brachytherapy does not cause cell death by apoptosis but by necrosis and maturation of the cells into better differentiated cells, which is caused by OH free radical, and induction of the
keratin
gene respectively. It is possible that brachytherapy may cause destruction of cells containing wild-type
p53
, while mutant p53 in cells located at the tumour periphery escape the effect of brachytherapy. This may be responsible for the high incidence of local recurrence and distant metastasis in oesophageal cancer treated with radiotherapy. There is no effect of brachytherapy on bcl-2 expression in oesophageal cancer.
...
PMID:Preliminary report on the effect of brachytherapy on expression of p53, bc1-2 and apoptosis in squamous cell carcinoma of the oesophagus. 1275 68
Neoplasms that are composed focally, predominantly, or exclusively of osteoclast-like giant cells admixed with variably pleomorphic mononuclear cells have been described in a wide variety of organs. In this report, we describe the case of a 76-year-old woman with an 8-cm tumor that appeared to be localized to the ovary, that was composed predominantly of diffusely distributed, bland-appearing osteoclast-like giant cells admixed with pleomorphic mononuclear cells, and that was not associated with an ovarian cystic neoplasm. Hemorrhage, large zones of necrosis, and a high mitotic index were the other characteristics of the tumor. Immunohistochemically, the mononuclear cells were strongly positive for vimentin and proliferating cell nuclear antigen and were negative for
keratin
AE 1/3, CAM 5.2, cytokeratin 7, epithelial membrane antigen, beta-human chorionic gonadotropin, desmin, smooth muscle actin,
p53
, leukocyte common antigen, S-100, inhibin, alpha-1-antichymotrypsin, and CD68. The osteoclast-like giant cells displayed immunoreactivity for CD68, vimentin, alpha-1-antichymotrypsin, and leukocyte common antigen only. Ultrastructurally, rare intercellular junctions were present between mononuclear cells, suggestive of an epithelial histogenesis. Less than a dozen ovarian lesions with the "giant cell" designation have been described, and most of these cases are thought to be analogous to the "sarcoma-like" nodules or other such lesions that have a well-known association with ovarian cystic neoplasms. Our case, in contrast, did not have an easily identifiable epithelial component and demonstrated both an infiltrative border and vascular invasion. This is, to the authors' knowledge, the first detailed clinicopathologic description of such a case as an ovarian lesion.
...
PMID:A malignant ovarian tumor with osteoclast-like giant cells. 1276 94
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