Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UNIPROT:P50583 (asymmetrical)
12,197 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

We have adapted the alkaline phosphatase-anti alkaline phosphatase (APAAP) technique to demonstrate cell antigen distributions in intact agar culture. The method facilitates batch processing and is no less convenient to perform than standard APAAP procedures. Myeloid and lymphoid antigens generally demonstrated strong staining intensity. However, staining at day 0 consistently produced no antigen expression for two monoclonals (CD11c and CD34) in contrast to positivity in parallel cytospins. CD11c showed rapidly increasing antigen expression over subsequent days of culture whereas the expression of CD34 could not be shown in conventional agar culture at any time from day 0 to day 14. Positivity was only restored in CD34-positive leukaemic cells using a modified culture technique in which cells were cultured as pre-formed small aggregates. Assessment of these aggregates extended to cell cycle analysis using anti-bromodeoxyuridine. CD71 positivity in normal culture samples correlated with colony configuration (whether clones were 'spread' or 'tight' in appearance). CD38 staining of normal bone marrow culture at day 7 showed asymmetrical staining of cells in a small number of micro-groups. The clonal detection of aberrant antigens (CD7, CD2) for assessment of minimal residual disease in AML was a disappointment due to the relative frequency of positive clones in normal culture.
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PMID:Immunostaining of whole agar cultures by APAAP. 762 32

Colorectal cancer is the fourth most common cancer in men and the third most common cancer in women worldwide. The partial failure of classic therapeutic options makes scientists to doubt the efficacy of systemic treatments in targeting the essential cell populations and achieving cure as a final goal. Overgrowing data suggest that cancer is a disease closely linked to stem cells (SCs). It is well known that the first identification of cancer stem-like cells in acute myeloid leukaemia was soon followed by similar results in solid malignancies, including colorectal cancer, and the classic model for colon carcinogenesis supports the development of sudden mutations that will lead to the activation or inactivation of certain oncogenes or tumor suppressors. Thus, this process may go on for years before the first symptoms and the only cells able to withstand for many years, avoid apoptosis and have a high regenerative capacity are the progenitor cells found at the lower part of colon crypts. A more profound study of the mechanisms and molecular signalling pathways that control the basic characteristics of SCs, such as asymmetrical division or self-renewal, may help comprehend the basic mechanisms of cancer genesis and progression. This will result in the development of new therapeutic agents that may target chemoresistant cell populations and improve the therapeutic results. In the current review we point out the importance of cancer stem-like cells in colorectal oncology from a pathologist's point of view, stating the obvious correlation between histology, embryology and surgical pathology.
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PMID:The colorectal cancer stem-like cell hypothesis: a pathologist's point of view. 2274 Jan 98