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Query: UNIPROT:P15088 (
mast cell
)
14,925
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Tumors were induced in 46 of 52 female Sprague-Dawley rats by gastric intubation of 5 mg of DMBA, dissolved in 1 ml of sesame oil, given weekly for 5 weeks. From 4 weeks after the final dose tumors were recorded and measured. Bilateral ovariectomy was done 3 days before sacrifice and assay. Excised tumors were immediately immersed in ice-cold Tris-EDTA buffer. Sections were prepared for histological examination. The assay was done by sucrose density centrifugation after administration of (2,4,6,7-tritiated)-estradiol-17beta in vivo 3 minutes before killing, and/or in vitro. For specific estrogen-binding proteins the capacity to bind (tritiated)-estradiol-17beta was not related to the growth characteristics, time of appearance, or time between ovariectomy and assay. Different tumors had estrogen-binding capacities unrelated to the percentage of neoplastic cells in the tumor, amount of inflammation,
mast cell
infiltration, or presence of fluid-filled cysts. The number of mitoses and the lipid content of the tumors were correlated with the estrogen-binding capacity in that it was lower in tumors with many mitoses and in those with much lipid in the epithelial cells. Of 19 adenocarcinomas, 6 did not regress after ovariectomy. In 5 of the regressed tumors a new growth phase was seen, beginning 2 months after ovariectomy. Tumors encountered, other than mammary adenocarcinomas, were an extraosseous
osteosarcoma
, fibroadenomas, and zymbal-gland tumors.
...
PMID:Morphology, growth characteristics and oestrogen-binding capacity of DMBA-induced mammary tumours from ovariectomized rats. 40 32
Twenty-eight epithelial and 22 nonepithelial feline tumors were studied immunohistochemically. Epithelial tumors were 10 squamous cell carcinomas, two basal cell tumors, two sebaceous gland carcinomas, three apocrine gland carcinomas, three thyroid papillary carcinomas, one thyroid solid carcinoma, one renal clear cell carcinoma, one renal papillary carcinoma, one endometrial carcinoma, and four lung bronchioloalveolar carcinomas. Nonepithelial tumors were 10 fibrosarcomas, one liposarcoma, one leiomyosarcoma, one rhabdomyosarcoma, one hemangiosarcoma, two
mast cell
tumors, one
osteosarcoma
, three melanomas, and two lymphomas. Commercially available antibodies directed against high- and low-molecular-weight keratins (keratin, RCK-102, NCL-5D3), vimentin, desmin, glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP), and neurofilament intermediate filament (IF) proteins were used in the avidin-biotin-peroxidase complex technique on formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded tumor tissue samples. All epithelial tumors except the endometrial carcinoma expressed some type of keratin protein. Squamous cell carcinomas expressed high-molecular-weight keratins exclusively. Coexpression of high- and low-molecular-weight keratins was observed in one basal cell tumor, sebaceous and apocrine adenocarcinomas, and thyroid, renal, and lung carcinomas. In addition to keratins, vimentin immunoreactivity was found in all basal cell tumors, all sebaceous gland, thyroid papillary, renal, and lung adenocarcinomas, and one of the apocrine gland adenocarcinomas. Immunoreactivity with GFAP antibody was found in one basal cell tumor and one sebaceous gland adenocarcinoma. The endometrial carcinoma did not react with any of the antibodies applied. Nonepithelial tumors analyzed expressed either vimentin (fibrosarcomas, liposarcoma, haemangiosarcoma,
mast cell
tumors, osteosarcomas, melanomas) or vimentin and desmin (leiomyosarcoma, rhabdomyosarcoma, one fibrosarcoma) IF proteins exclusively. Lymphomas did not react with any of the antibodies employed. These findings indicate that IF proteins antibodies can be included in diagnostic panels of antibodies for immunocharacterization of feline tumors. In addition, they can be used as a basis for the diagnoses of poorly differentiated or undifferentiated feline neoplasms.
...
PMID:Immunohistochemical distribution pattern of intermediate filament proteins in 50 feline neoplasms. 859 5
Retrospective analysis of biopsy material submitted to an Institute of Veterinary Pathology by private veterinary practitioners from 1993-1995 revealed tumors in 157 dogs and 71 cats under one year of age. Both histiocytomas and papillomas were excluded from the study. In the dog 55% (n = 87) and in the cat 73% (n = 52) of all tumors were diagnosed as malignant. In the dog tumors in order of frequency were: mammary neoplasia (n = 24, of those n = 10 malignant), soft tissue sarcomas (n = 24), hematopoietic tumors (n = 23), benign mesenchymal tumors (n = 16),
mast cell
tumors (n = 15), odontogenic tumors (n = 9), melanomas (n = 9, of those n = 5 malignant),
osteosarcoma
(n = 6), others (n = 31). In the feline, sarcomas were most common and of those hematopoietic tumors (lymphoma n = 23; 32%;
mast cell
tumors n = 12; 17%) were the two largest groups. The remaining sarcomas were 13 soft tissue sarcomas (18%) of which fibrosarcomas (n = 8) were most prevalent. Carcinomas where diagnosed in only 2 cases whereas among benign neoplasms (n = 19; 27%), epithelial tumors were the largest group (n = 14). In the order of frequency the following benign neoplasias were identified: fibroadenoma of mammary gland (n = 5), odontogenic tumors (n = 5), benign soft tissue tumors (n = 4), others (n = 6).
...
PMID:[Small animal contribution to pediatric oncology]. 941 47
Retinoids show antitumor effects on human acute promyelocytic leukemia and other tumors via retinoid receptors. In dogs, the role of retinoid receptors in inhibiting tumor development remains unclear. To evaluate the correlation between the degree of expression of retinoic acid receptor alpha (RARalpha) mRNA and the antiproliferative effects of all-trans retinoic acid (ATRA) treatments, expression analysis of RARalpha mRNA and cell growth inhibition assay were performed on 17 established canine tumor cell lines, including 6 mammary gland tumor (MGT) cell lines, 3
osteosarcoma
cell lines, 5 melanoma cell lines, and 3
mast cell
tumor (MCT) cell lines. Among the cell lines investigated, all 3 MCT cell lines showed high expression of RARalpha, and the most effective cell growth inhibition was observed in ATRA-treated MCT cell lines. However, remarkable antiproliferative effects of ATRA treatments were not observed on other tumor cell lines with moderate or low RARalpha mRNA expression. As a result of the relationship between RARalpha mRNA expression and ATRA treatment with regression analysis, statistically significant correlation was suggested. Furthermore, real-time quantitative polymerase chain reaction analysis of RARalpha was performed on MCT tissue samples of dogs with spontaneous disease, and 5 of 9 tissues showed high expression. These results suggest that ATRA may be an effective antitumor agent for MCT in dogs, and that prior measurement of expression of RARalpha mRNA may be a good indicator of the effectiveness of ATRA treatment.
...
PMID:Relationship between retinoic acid receptor alpha gene expression and growth-inhibitory effect of all-trans retinoic acid on canine tumor cells. 1659 93
Amputation is commonly performed in an attempt to both treat and diagnose conditions affecting the digits of cats. The records of multiple veterinary diagnostic laboratories were searched to identify submissions of amputated digits from cats. Eighty-five separate submissions were reviewed for diagnosis, age, sex, limb of origin, and digits affected; and the original submitting clinics were surveyed to determine clinical outcome. The Kaplan-Meier product-limit method was used to determine the disease-free interval and survival time. Neoplastic disease was identified in 63 of 85 submissions, with exclusively inflammatory lesions composing the other 22 cases. In 60 (95.2%) of the neoplastic cases, a malignant tumor was identified. Squamous cell carcinoma was the most commonly identified malignant tumor (n = 15; 23.8%) and was associated with a median survival time of 73 days. Other diagnoses included fibrosarcoma (n = 14; 22.2%); adenocarcinoma, likely metastases of a primary pulmonary neoplasm (n = 13; 20.6%);
osteosarcoma
(n = 5; 7.9%);
mast cell
tumor (n = 4; 6.3%); hemangiosarcoma (n = 5; 7.9%); malignant fibrous histiocytoma (n = 2; 3.2%); giant cell tumor of bone (n = 2; 3.2%); and hemangioma (n = 2; 3.2%). Giant cell tumor of bone has not been previously described in the digits of cats. Various neoplasms can occur in the digits of cats, and submission of the amputated digit for histopathologic diagnosis is essential to determine the histogenesis and predict the clinical outcome.
...
PMID:Diagnoses and clinical outcomes associated with surgically amputated feline digits submitted to multiple veterinary diagnostic laboratories. 1749 Oct 78
Being the first lymph node or nodes to which many primary tumours reliably drain, the disease status of the sentinel lymph node/s (SLN) is important in the prediction of survival. SLN identification and biopsy are critical in the staging of human cancers. The status of the SLN helps determine prognosis and shape treatment plans. SLN evaluation is currently not routinely performed in veterinary oncology, not even at specialty oncology practices. Given the prognostic importance of lymph node involvement in tumours such as mammary gland carcinoma,
osteosarcoma
, synovial cell sarcoma and
mast cell
tumours, SLN evaluation should be incorporated into routine clinical practice so as to improve our clinical assessment of veterinary oncologic patients.
...
PMID:A review of sentinel lymph node evaluation and the need for its incorporation into veterinary oncology. 1945 62
In humans, the aryl hydrocarbon receptor (AHR) gene battery constitutes a set of contaminant-responsive genes, which have been recently shown to be involved in the regulation of several patho-physiological conditions, including tumorigenesis. As the domestic dog represents a valuable animal model in comparative oncology, mRNA levels of cytochromes P450 1A1, 1A2 and 1B1 (CYP1A1, 1A2 and 1B1), AHR, AHR nuclear translocator (ARNT), AHR repressor (AHRR, whose partial sequence was here obtained) and cyclooxygenase-2 (COX2) were measured in dog control tissues (liver, skin, mammary gland and bone), in 47
mast cell
tumors (MCTs), 32 mammary tumors (MTs), 5
osteosarcoma
(
OSA
) and related surgical margins. Target genes were constitutively expressed in the dog, confirming the available human data. Furthermore, their pattern of expression in tumor biopsies was comparable to that already described in a variety of human cancers; in particular, both AHR and COX2 genes were up-regulated and positively correlated, while CYP1A1 and CYP1A2 mRNAs were generally poorly expressed. This work demonstrated for the first time that target mRNAs are expressed in neoplastic tissues of dogs, thereby increasing the knowledge about dog cancer biology and confirming this species as an useful animal model for comparative studies on human oncology.
...
PMID:Expression of the aryl hydrocarbon receptor pathway and cyclooxygenase-2 in dog tumors. 2292 34
Feline gastrointestinal eosinophilic sclerosing fibroplasia was diagnosed in an 8-month-old Scottish fold that had a primary gastrointestinal mass involving the stomach, duodenum and mesenteric lymph nodes. Histopathologically, the most characteristic feature of this mass was granulation tissue with eosinophil infiltration and hyperplasia of sclerosing collagen fiber. Immunohistochemically, large spindle-shaped cells were positive for smooth muscle actin and vimentin. This case emphasizes the importance of feline gastrointestinal eosinophilic sclerosing fibroplasia as a differential diagnosis of gastrointestinal neoplastic lesions such as
osteosarcoma
and
mast cell
tumor in cats.
...
PMID:A case of feline gastrointestinal eosinophilic sclerosing fibroplasia. 2372 68
Cancer is a common problem in dogs and although all breeds of dog and crossbred dogs may be affected, it is notable that some breeds of pedigree dogs appear to be at increased risk of certain types of cancer suggesting underlying genetic predisposition to cancer susceptibility. Although the aetiology of most cancers is likely to be multifactorial, the limited genetic diversity seen in purebred dogs facilitates genetic linkage or association studies on relatively small populations as compared to humans, and by using newly developed resources, genome-wide association studies in dog breeds are proving to be a powerful tool for unravelling complex disorders. This paper will review the literature on canine breed susceptibility to histiocytic sarcoma,
osteosarcoma
, haemangiosarcoma,
mast cell
tumours, lymphoma, melanoma, and mammary tumours including the recent advances in knowledge through molecular genetic, cytogenetic, and genome wide association studies.
...
PMID:Breed-predispositions to cancer in pedigree dogs. 2373 39
Oncolytic virotherapy is a new strategy for cancer treatment for humans and dogs. Reovirus has been proven to be a potent oncolytic virus in human medicine. Our laboratory has previously reported that canine
mast cell
tumor and canine lymphoma were susceptible to reovirus. In this study, canine solid tumor cell lines (mammary gland tumor,
osteosarcoma
and malignant melanoma) were tested to determine their susceptibility towards reovirus. We demonstrated that reovirus induces more than 50% cell death in three canine mammary gland tumors and one canine malignant melanoma cell line. The reovirus-induced cell death occurred via the activation of caspase 3. Ras activation has been shown to be one of the important mechanisms of reovirus-susceptibility in human cancers. However, Ras activation was not related to the reovirus-susceptibility in canine solid tumor cell lines, which was similar to reports in canine
mast cell
tumor and canine lymphoma. The results of this study highly suggest that canine mammary gland tumor and canine malignant melanoma are also potential candidates for reovirus therapy in veterinary oncology.
...
PMID:The oncolytic effects of reovirus in canine solid tumor cell lines. 2564 33
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