Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UNIPROT:P61278 (somatostatin)
22,083 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Ordinary histological investigation has suggested that heterotopic pancreas of the stomach may have two types of histogenesis; one is development from immigrated fetal pancreas tissue, and the other is development from primitive gastric mucosal epithelium following penetration into the submucosa with subsequent erroneous differentiation into pancreas tissue. It is suspected that type-I lesions include the majority of cases caused by immigration from fetal pancreas, and that some type-II cases arise through erroneous differentiation of primitive gastric mucosal epithelium. With regard to immunohistochemical findings, cells positive for pancreatic polypeptide and amylase were much more numerous in the acini of type-I cases compared with type-II cases. Positive cells were found not infrequently in the acini of type-II cases after staining for pancreatic polypeptide, insulin, glucagon, somatostatin, serotonin, and gastrin. On the other hand, a small number of cells in islets were not infrequently positive for alpha 1-antitrypsin, alpha 1-antichymotrypsin, and amylase. It is considered that in the heterotopic pancreas, ductal cells have the potential to differentiate into acinar cells and islet cells, as is the cases in the orthotopic pancreas.
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PMID:Heterotopic pancreas of the stomach. Histogenesis and immunohistochemistry. 137 53

Seven hepatoblastomas were studied by electron microscopy, and four of these were studied by immunohistochemistry. Five tumors were purely epithelial, and two were mixed epithelial-mesenchymal. They showed a spectrum of cellular differentiation ranging from primitive epithelial cells to differentiated cells resembling adult hepatocytes. Glycogen, lipid, basal lamina, and canaliculi were present in all cases. Mitochondria with large, membrane-bound, amorphous inclusions were present in one tumor, and large, complex, basal cell processes were present in two tumors. Ultrastructural features most characteristic of hepatocytes were most common in fetal type hepatoblastomas. Immunoreactive chromogranin cells were present in two tumors, one of which also contained immunoreactive somatostatin cells. The somatostatin-positive tumor had cells with granules resembling those seen in somatostatin-containing cells of normal pancreas and somatostatin-containing neuroendocrine carcinomas. Other immunoreactive substances were present, including alpha 1-antitrypsin (four cases), vimentin (embryonal cells in four cases; fetal cells in three cases), low-molecular weight cytokeratin (embryonal cells in three cases; fetal cells in four cases), and high-molecular weight cytokeratin (embryonal cells in one case; fetal cells in two cases). Osteoidlike material was positive for epithelial membrane antigen, vimentin, and S-100 protein.
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PMID:Hepatoblastomas: an ultrastructural and immunohistochemical study. 138 Jan 93

Immunohistochemical studies and DNA flow-cytometric investigations were performed in a case of solid-cystic tumour of the pancreas in a 35-year-old woman. All tumour cells were immunoreactive for the neuroendocrine cell markers chromogranin A and neuron-specific gamma-enolase. Moreover, about 10% of tumour cells were immunoreactive for insulin, while hypoglycaemia was absent. Few tumour cells (less than 1%) were immunoreactive for somatostatin, and no cells were found to be immunoreactive for pancreatic polypeptide or glucagon. No immunoreactivity was present for duct cell marker carcino-embryonic antigen and only individual cells were reactive for alpha 1-antitrypsin. Nuclear DNA content of the tumour cells was diploid and the proliferative activity was low. In confirmation of some reports on neuroendocrine markers in solid-cystic tumour of the pancreas, our findings support the theory that the lesion is a hormonally inactive neuroendocrine pancreatic tumour.
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PMID:Solid-cystic tumour of the pancreas. An endocrine neoplasm? 211 Jul 1

A case of a 58-year-old woman with an unusual variant of malignant islet-cell tumor showing oncocytic features is described. Using the light microscopy technique, the tumor appeared comprised of solid nests of uniform cells with abundant, eosinophilic cytoplasm and round nuclei with granular chromatin. Ultrastructurally, the cells contained numerous abnormal mitochondria, dilated rough endoplasmic reticulum, and scattered dense-core neurosecretory granules, often associated with cytoplasmic filaments. Tumor cells were focally immunoreactive for insulin, glucagon, and somatostatin and diffusely immunoreactive for alpha 1-antitrypsin as assayed by the avidin--biotin technique. The tumor was immunonegative for human chorionic gonadotropin, gastrin, adrenocorticotropic hormone, and serotonin. The patient exhibited some of the clinical features associated with glucagonoma syndrome, including diabetes mellitus and chronic diarrhea. The tumor behaved in a malignant fashion, with widespread lymphatic involvement and bony metastases at the time of presentation. This report of an oncocytic islet-cell carcinoma supports the concept of oncocytic differentiation in islet-cell tumors in a fashion analagous to oncocytic carcinoids.
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PMID:Functioning oncocytic islet-cell carcinoma. Report of a case with electron-microscopic and immunohistochemical confirmation. 300 44

Carcinoembryonic antigen, epithelial membrane antigen, Keratin, Desmin, Vimentin, CD30, lysozyme, alpha 1-antitrypsin, alpha 1-antichymotrypsin, S-100 protein, somatostatin and glucagon were looked for using immunohistochemical methods in the epithelial component of 20 parotid gland cystadenolymphomas and 20 normal parotid glands. Carcino-embryonic antigen, ephithelial membrane antigen, S-100 protein, and somatostatin were found in the epithelial cells of most of the cystadenolymphomas. In normal parotid tissue, carcinoembryonic antigen, epithelial membrane antigen, Keratin, alpha 1-antitrypsin, alpha 1-antichymotrypsin, and S-100 protein were found in all three types of ductal cells, somatostatin only in intercalated and striated ductal cells, and lysozyme only in acinar and intercalated ductal cells. Desmin and CD30 were found in the epithelial component of seven of the 20 tumors versus none of the 20 normal parotid glands. Glucagon and Vimentin were negative both in tumor epithelial cells and in normal parotid ductal cells. Our results support the theory that cystadenolymphomas arise from epithelial cells. The presence of lysozyme in the epithelial tumor cells and in the intercalated ductal cells of normal parotid tissue suggest that cystadenolymphomas may arise from the intercalated ducts. The presence of S-100 and somatostatin may indicate that the tumor derives from neuroendocrine structures, but further studies are needed to clarify this point.
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PMID:Cystadenolymphoma of the parotid gland an immunohistochemical study of the epithelial component of twenty cases. 915 27