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M F Giannoni,
E Vicenzini,
M Citone,
M C Ricciardi,
L Irace,
A Laurito,
L F Scucchi,
V Di Piero,
B Gossetti,
A Mauriello, L G Spagnoli,
G L Lenzi,
F B Valentini
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ABSTRACT: To evaluate whether contrast ultrasonography can be used to distinguish asymptomatic from symptomatic carotid plaques and provide insight into underlying pathophysiological differences.
Contrast carotid ultrasound was performed in both symptomatic and asymptomatic patients referred for carotid endarterectomy.
Of 77 consecutive patients referred for carotid artery evaluation, 64 underwent carotid endarterectomy for asymptomatic cerebrovascular disease and 9 underwent urgent surgery for acute neurological deficits with hemiparesis. The endarterectomy specimens were assessed immunohistologically.
In all 9 patients undergoing urgent surgery, contrast ultrasonography showed the accumulation of diffuse microbubble contrast at the base of the carotid plaque. This pattern was observed only in 1/64 of the patients undergoing surgery for asymptomatic carotid disease. Immunohistologically staining of the endarterectomy specimens showed that the area of microbubble contrast at the base of the symptomatic plaques was associated with an increased number of small diameter (20-30 microm) microvessels staining for vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF).
Contrast carotid ultrasonography may allow the identification of microvessels with neoangiogenesis at the base of carotid plaques, and differentiate symptomatic from asymptomatic plaques.
European journal of vascular and endovascular surgery: the official journal of the European Society for Vascular Surgery 04/2009; 37(6):722-7. · 2.92 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: The transition from normal to malignant phenotype implies the activation of some pathways that underlie the aberrant clone expansion. In some way, the conventional function of proteins involved in DNA repair, cell death/growth induction, vascularization, and metabolism is inhibited or shifted toward other pathways by soluble mediators that orchestrate such change depending on the microenvironment conditions. The adenoma-carcinoma sequence of the colon represents one of the most well studied and characterized models of human tumor progression. In this section, we focus our attention on defined pathways that underlie the initiation, promotion, and progression of colon cancer, conferring aggressiveness to the neoplastic cells. Clusterin (CLU) is a pleiotropic protein with a broad range of functions. It has recently drawn much attention because of its association with cancer promotion and metastasis. It is involved in prosurvival and apoptosis processes that are carried out by two different forms. sCLU is cytoprotective and its prosurvival function is the basis of the current Phase I/II clinical trials. In colorectal cancer an increase of sCLU expression occurs, whereas the nuclear proapoptotic form is downregulated. Several controversial data have been published on colon cancer discussing its role as tumor suppressor or prosurvival factor in colon cancer. Here, we report the dynamic interaction of the different forms of CLU with their partners DNA-repair protein Ku70 and proapoptotic factor Bax during colon cancer progression, which seems to be a crucial point for the neoplastic cell fate. We also highlight that the appearance and the progressive increase of the sCLU in colorectal tumors correlate to a significant increase of CLU in serum and stool of patients. On the basis of results obtained by CLU immuno-dosage in blood and stool of colon cancer patients, we report that sCLU could represent a diagnostic molecular marker for colon cancer screening.
Advances in Cancer Research 01/2009; 105:45-61. · 4.46 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: Cancer cells need to interact synergistically with their surrounding microenvironment to form a neoplasm and to progress further to colonize distant organs. The microenvironment can exert profound epigenetic effects on cells through cell-derived interactions between cells, or through cell-derived factors deposited into the microenvironment. Tumor progression implies immune-escaping and triggers several processes that synergistically induce a cooperation among transformed and stromal cells, that compete for space and resources such as oxygen and nutrients. Therefore, the extra cellular milieu and tissue microenvironment heterotypic interactions cooperate to promote tumor growth, angiogenesis, and cancer cell motility, through elevated secretion of pleiotropic cytokines and soluble factors. Clusterin (CLU), widely viewed as an enigmatic protein represents one of the numerous cellular factors sharing the intracellular information with the microenvironment and it has also a systemic diffusion, tightly joining the "In and the Out" of the cell with a still debated variety of antagonistic functions. The multiplicity of names for CLU is an indication of the complexity of the problem and could reflect, on one hand its multifunctionality, or alternatively could mask a commonality of function. The posited role for CLU, further supported as a cytoprotective prosurvival chaperone-like molecule, seems compelling, in contrast its tumor suppressor function, as a guide of the guardians of the genome (DNA-repair proteins Ku70/80, Bax cell death inducer), could really reflect the balanced expression of its different forms, most certainly depending on the intra- and extracellular microenvironment cross talk. The complicated balance of cytokines network and the regulation of CLU forms production in cancer and stromal cells undoubtedly represent a potential link among adaptative responses, genomic stability, and bystander effect after oxidative stresses and damage. This review focuses on the tumor-microenvironment interactions strictly involved in controlling local cancer growth, invasion, and distant metastases that play a decisive role in the regulation of CLU different forms expression and release. In addition, we focus on the pleiotropic action of the extracellular form of this protein, sCLU, that may play a crucial role in redirecting stromal changes, altering intercellular communications binding cell surface receptors and contributing to influence the secretion of chemokines in paracrine and autocrine fashion. Further elucidation of CLU functions inside and outside ("in and out") of cancer cell are warranted for a deeper understanding of the interplay between tumor and stroma, suggesting new therapeutic cotargeting strategies.
Advances in Cancer Research 01/2009; 105:93-113. · 4.46 Impact Factor
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E Candi,
A Rufini,
A Terrinoni,
D Dinsdale,
M Ranalli,
A Paradisi,
V De Laurenzi, L G Spagnoli,
M V Catani,
S Ramadan,
R A Knight,
G Melino
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ABSTRACT: Epidermal development requires the transcription factor p63, as p63-/- mice are born dead, without skin. The gene expresses two proteins, one with an amino-terminal transactivation domain (TAp63) and one without (deltaNp63), although their relative contribution to epidermal development is unknown. To address this issue, we reintroduced TAp63alpha and/or deltaNp63alpha under the K5 promoter into p63-/- mice by in vivo genetic complementation. Whereas p63-/- and p63-/-;TA mice showed extremely rare patches of poorly differentiated keratinocytes, p63-/-;deltaN mice showed significant epidermal basal layer formation. Double TAp63alpha/deltaNp63alpha complementation showed greater patches of differentiated skin; at the ultrastructural level, there was clear reformation of a distinct basal membrane and hemidesmosomes. At the molecular level, deltaNp63 regulated expression of genes characteristic of the basal layer (K14), interacting (by Chip, luc assay) with the third p53 consensus site. Conversely, TAp63 transcribed the upper layer's genes (Ets-1, K1, transglutaminases, involucrin). Therefore, the two p63 isoforms appear to play distinct cooperative roles in epidermal formation.
Cell Death and Differentiation 07/2006; 13(6):1037-47. · 8.85 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: The origin of myxoma, the most frequent tumour of the heart, remains uncertain. Previous phenotypic characterizations have shown heterogeneous results and the most recent hypothesis suggests that cardiac myxoma originates from a primitive pluripotential cardiogenic cell. We investigated the expression of actin isoforms in 30 left atrial myxomas by immunohistochemistry and in eight consecutive tumours by RT-PCR. alpha-Smooth muscle actin (alpha-SMA) protein and/or transcripts were detected in all cases, whereas alpha-cardiac actin was observed in few cases and alpha-skeletal actin was always absent. Besides classical features, vessel-like structures were characterized by cells expressing CD34 and, less frequently, alpha-SMA. Confocal microscopy showed focal co-expression of CD34 and alpha-SMA in myxoma cells, suggesting a gradual loss of stem endothelial markers and the acquisition of myocytic antigens. In order to confirm this hypothesis, early cardiac differentiation markers were also investigated. RT-PCR documented the presence of transcripts for Sox9 (100%), Notch1 (87.5%), NFATc1 (37.5%), Smad6, metalloproteinases 1 and 2 alone or in variable combinations and the absence of ErbB3 and WT1. Myxoma cells maintained phenotypic heterogeneity in vitro, including the expression of alpha-SMA and the presence of stress fibres. These findings document in cardiac myxoma cells phenotypic markers of the embryonic endothelial-to-mesenchymal transformation that precedes terminal differentiation of endocardial cushions, supporting the hypothesis that cardiac myxoma cells may derive from adult developmental remnants.
The Journal of Pathology 07/2006; 209(2):231-9. · 6.32 Impact Factor
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Pathologica 09/2005; 97(4):192-3.
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ABSTRACT: A previously healthy 70 year old woman was admitted for fatigue and dyspnoea on exertion and cough. A two dimensional echocardiography revealed a mass in the right atrium, which obstructed filling and infiltrated the cardiac chamber wall. Postsurgical histological examination revealed an unusual tumour with prevalent myoid glomangiopericytoma-type and haemangiopericytoma-like patterns. Mitosis and necrosis were absent. A computed tomography scan excluded the presence of metastasis to distant organs or, conversely, metastatic involvement of the heart. Therefore, a diagnosis of tumour with perivascular myoid differentiation was made. This new entity, recently described in soft tissues, can easily recur. Its recognition helps to differentiate from metastasis and other primitive cardiac tumours sharing some morphological features but a different clinical behaviour, with consequent improvement to the management of patient care.
Journal of Clinical Pathology 01/2005; 57(12):1338-40. · 2.31 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: Cellular retinol-binding protein-1 (CRBP-1) contributes to the maintenance of the differentiated state of the endometrium through retinol bioavailability regulation. The aim was to analyse CRBP-1 expression in endometrial stromal cells at eutopic and ectopic sites in different physiopathological conditions.
Antibodies to CRBP-1, CD10 and alpha-smooth muscle actin were applied to proliferative (n = 10), secretory (n = 9) and atrophic (n = 7) endometrium, decidua (n = 4), adenomyosis (n = 5), endometriosis (n = 10), endometrial polyps (n = 9), simple endometrial hyperplasia (n = 6), well-differentiated endometrioid carcinoma (n = 6) and submucosal leiomyomas (n = 5). In some cases, Western blotting and reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction were also applied. CRBP-1 was expressed by eutopic and ectopic endometrial stromal cells more markedly during the late secretory phase and in decidua of pregnancy. CRBP-1 expression was low in the stroma of atrophic endometrium and absent in myometrium, leiomyomas and cervical stroma. CD10 immunoreactivity was weak in atrophic endometrium and in decidua.
CRBP-1 expression characterizes endometrial stromal cells at eutopic and ectopic sites and appears to be more specific than CD10. The level of CRBP-1 varies in intensity according to hormonal variations, reaching its maximum in predecidua and decidua. Thus, immunodetection of CRBP-1 may help to elucidate the physiopathological changes which occur in endometrial stroma and can also be applied as an adjuvant stromal marker.
Histopathology 12/2004; 45(5):511-7. · 3.08 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: Basal cell carcinoma (BCC) is the most common cancer in humans. Medical treatment modalities offer cost reductions and clinical advantages in selected cases such as low-risk areas, surgically inaccessible sites, patients with multiple neoplasms, and older, infirm or anticoagulated subjects. Tazarotene has been proposed for the treatment of BCC; however, data on its efficacy are lacking.
To investigate the efficacy of tazarotene in a large series of BCCs, better to define the clinical advantages and the mechanisms of action in vivo.
Tazarotene 0.1% gel was applied daily for 24 weeks to 154 small superficial and nodular BBCs. Clinicopathological changes were followed during the therapy by dermoscopic and histological examination. Proliferation, retinoic acid receptors and apoptosis were investigated by immunohistochemistry and terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase-mediated deoxyuridine triphosphate-biotin nick-end labelling on biopsies.
At 24 weeks of therapy, 70.8% of the BCCs showed > 50% clinical and dermoscopic regression, and 30.5% healed without recurrences after 3 years of follow-up. At 12 weeks, biopsies showed that regression was associated with reduced proliferation and increased apoptosis of basaliomatous cells. Most unresponsive tumours displayed a keratotic differentiation.
Tazarotene was effective in the majority of superficial and nodular undifferentiated BCCs treated, possibly by antiproliferative and proapoptotic actions in vivo. Keratotic BCCs were the major type among the unresponsive tumours, and were characterized by overexpression of p53 and cellular retinol binding protein-1 in comparison with undifferentiated tumours. Topical tazarotene represents an alternative medical choice for selected cases of BCC.
British Journal of Dermatology 08/2004; 151(1):148-56. · 3.67 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: A 41 year old man with a history of politrauma presented with a nodular mass of the left false vocal cord, associated with progressive dysphonia, dyspnoea, and dysphagia. A computed tomography scan of the neck region showed a rounded and circumscribed mass without infiltration of the surrounding tissues. Histological investigation of the nodule revealed the presence of fibroelastic cartilaginous tissue, surrounded by a thin rim of fibrous tissue, with rare hypercellular areas, occasional binucleated cells, slight hyperchromasia, and an irregular nuclear profile. Mitotic activity was absent. The patient's history of laryngeal trauma, with the subsequent progressive onset of clinical symptoms, helps to distinguish the chondrometaplastic nature of this nodule from true laryngeal cartilaginous tumours, such as chondroma and low grade chondrosarcoma.
Journal of Clinical Pathology 01/2004; 56(12):976-7. · 2.31 Impact Factor
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Histopathology 05/2003; 42(4):407-10. · 3.08 Impact Factor
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Circulation 02/2002; 105(2):E5-6. · 14.74 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: In this study we investigated the relationship between nuclear and cell surface modifications (i.e. blebbing, phosphatidylserine [PS] and sugar residues exposure) in a monocytic cell line, U937, during apoptosis induced by oxidative stress (1 mM H2O2) or inhibition of protein synthesis (10 microg/ml puromycin). Dying cells were simultaneously observed for nuclear modifications, presence of superficial blebs and plasma membrane alterations. Morphological analysis performed by conventional fluorescence microscopy, or by transmission and scanning electron microscopy showed that the courses of nuclear and membrane alterations occured concomitantly, but the phenotype was dependent on the stage of the apoptotic process and the type of apoptogenic inducer used. The progression of apoptosis in U937 cells beyond early stages resulted in the extensive formation of blebs which concomitantly lost some typical markers of apoptosis, such as PS and sugar residues. Therefore, the modality by which the nucleus condenses, or the amount and the pattern of distribution of PS on the cell surface were, for each cell line, strictly related to the apoptogenic inducer. The morphological data reported in the present paper should lead to a more precise quantification of apoptosis by improving the detection of apoptotic cells in vivo (i.e. in tissue, organs), which is a crucial point in the evaluation of efficiency of antiproliferative drugs, such as antiblastic or immunosuppressive compounds.
European journal of histochemistry: EJH 02/2002; 46(1):61-74. · 1.69 Impact Factor
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A A Kotlyar,
Z Vered,
I Goldberg,
P Chouraqui,
D Nas,
E Fridman,
Z Chen-Levy,
S Fytlovich,
G Sangiorgi, L G Spagnoli,
A Orlandi,
N Savion,
M Eldar,
M Scheinowitz
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ABSTRACT: Insulin-like growth factors (IGF) I and II improve myocardial function after coronary occlusion in different animal models.
To investigate the mechanism of improved myocardial function after administration of IGF-I or IGF-II in acute myocardial infarction.
Female pigs (mean (SD) weight 25 (5) kg) were subjected to acute myocardial infarction by microembolisation with 75-150 micrometer affigel blue beads. The beads contained and slowly released 150 microgram/pig of IGF-I (n = 6), IGF-II (n = 6), or pig albumin (n = 6). Echocardiography, perfusion imaging, and haemodynamic measurements were performed before infarction and during four weeks after infarction. Regional wall motion of different left ventricular segments was scored semiquantitatively on the basis of a three point scoring system, from normal = 0 to dyskinesia = 3. Serum cardiac troponin I concentration was measured before, immediately after, and three hours after the infarct. Excised hearts were analysed for actin, desmin, blood vessel density, and DNA laddering within the infarct, border, and normal myocardial areas.
Myocardial function of the infarct related area improved significantly during the four weeks of follow up in both the IGF groups (p = 0.01). Myocardial perfusion, heart rate, and blood pressure were similar in all the animals during the study. Treated animals had lower serum cardiac troponin I concentration (p = 0.001), more actin in the border area (p = 0.01) and infarct area (p = 0.0001), and reduced DNA laddering in the infarct area compared with the controls (p < 0.05). IGF groups had more blood vessels in the border area (p = 0.04) and the infarct area (p = 0.003).
Both types of IGF improved myocardial function and the improvement was associated with preservation of myocardial structure. IGF-I was more effective than IGF-II.
Heart (British Cardiac Society) 12/2001; 86(6):693-700. · 4.22 Impact Factor
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G Sangiorgi,
R D'Averio,
A Mauriello,
M Bondio,
M Pontillo,
S Castelvecchio,
S Trimarchi,
V Tolva,
G Nano,
V Rampoldi, L G Spagnoli,
L Inglese
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ABSTRACT: Structural alterations of aortic wall resulting from degradation of matrix proteins by matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs) characterize abdominal aortic aneurysms (AAAs). No studies have compared circulating levels of MMPs after endovascular graft (EVG) exclusion in comparison with open surgical repair (OSR) in patients affected by AAA.
An abdominal angiography and CT scan were performed in all patients at the time of enrollment. A spiral CT scan was performed at 6 months to detect presence of endoleaks. MMP-3 and MMP-9 levels were measured before EVG (n=30) and OSR (n=15) treatments and at 1, 3, and 6 months of follow-up by a sandwich ELISA technique. Healthy volunteers (n=10) were used as control subjects. Immunohistochemical staining for MMP-9 and MMP-3 was performed on tissue samples from surgical cases. Both MMP-9 and MMP-3 mean basal levels were significantly higher in patients affected by AAA than in control subjects (32.3+/-20.7 ng/mL for EVG and 28+/-9.9 ng/mL for OSR versus 8.9+/-2.5 ng/mL, 2P<0.05; 18.3+/-9.7 ng/mL and 26.7+/-10.8 ng/mL versus 8.2+/-5.3 ng/mL, 2P<0.001). In the OSR group, both MMP-9 and MMP-3 mean levels decreased after surgery (28+/-9.9 ng/mL at basal versus 14.7+/-6.6 ng/mL at 6 months, 2P<0.001; 26.7+/-10.8 versus 12+/-5.3 ng/mL; 2P<0.001). In the EVG group, a statistically significant difference at 6-month follow-up in MMP-9 and MMP-3 mean plasma values was detected in patients who had endoleakage in comparison with patients without endoleakage (44.3+/-20.7 versus 14.6+/-7.0 ng/mL, 2P<0.005; 25+/-11.5 versus 10.3+/-5.4 ng/mL, 2P<0.005).
After EVG exclusion, MMP-9 and MMP-3 levels decreased to a level similar to that of patients undergoing OSR. In addition, a lack of decrease in MMP levels after EVG exclusion may help in identifying patients who will have endoleakage and consequent aneurysm expansion caused by continuous sac pressurization during follow-up.
Circulation 09/2001; 104(12 Suppl 1):I288-95. · 14.74 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: Rat aortic smooth muscle cells (SMCs) cultured from intimal thickening 15 days after endothelial injury (IT-15), unlike those of normal media, show a monolayered, epithelioid phenotype and high levels of cellular retinol binding protein-1 (CRBP). Epithelioid clones obtained from the normal media suggest a "mosaicism" of arterial SMCs. Intimal cell homeostasis from the balance of proliferation and apoptosis is critical for the progression of vascular lesions. All-trans retinoic acid (tRA) reduced [(3)H]thymidine incorporation and G(1)-->S phase progression of IT-15 and epithelioid clone but not of normal media and IT 60 days after injury (IT-60) SMCs. Hoechst staining, flow cytometry, and ligation-mediated polymerase chain reaction showed an increased susceptibility of IT-15 and epithelioid clone to tRA and cis-diaminedichloroplatinum II (CDDP)-induced apoptosis and cytotoxicity compared with normal media and IT-60 cells. The latter retained an increased susceptibility to tRA-induced apoptosis compared with normal media SMCs. tRA-induced apoptosis associated with an increased ratio of bax to bcl-2 by bax overexpression and cleavage of caspase-3. Anti-CRBP but not anti-IgG antibody prevented tRA-induced apoptosis and changes in related signaling molecules but not CDDP effects. Our findings support the relevant role of phenotypic heterogeneity in the determining proliferative as well as apoptotic behavior of arterial SMCs.
Arteriosclerosis Thrombosis and Vascular Biology 08/2001; 21(7):1118-23. · 6.37 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: Estrogen receptor (ER) analysis was performed in 46 primary breast carcinomas using four monoclonal antibodies (MABs) to ER (AER311, ER1D5, LH1, and LH2), each of which recognizes a distinct domain of the receptor protein. ER was expressed as the percentage of positively stained tumor cells. Statistical analysis was performed using the SPSS/PC+ program to set the cut off of positivity and the prognostic value of each MAB. A positivity >30% for each MAB possessed the best sensitivity/specificity ratio and was used as the cut-off value. Multivariate discriminant analysis showed that MABs AER311, ER1D5, and LH2 had significant prognostic value. Fourteen tumors showed positivity for these three MABs; 17 were positive for one or two of the three MABs, and 15 were negative for all three MABs. Survival analysis showed that patients with tumors negative for all three of these MABs had progression of the disease within 8 years from the diagnosis of the tumor, whereas all patients with tumors positive for all three MABs were alive 13 years after surgery. A significant correlation (P = 0.0006) between tumor grading and ER status was found; 71% of the tumors that were positive for all three MABs were grade 1, whereas tumors negative for all three MABs were mostly grades 2 and 3. No significant relationship was observed between ER status and tumor size. A significant correlation (P = 0.008) between lymph node status and ER was found; breast tumors positive for all three MABs were in the majority (92.9%) of cases pNO, whereas 67% of tumors negative for all three MABs were pN1. Results from the present study suggest that the use of a panel of MABs that target distinct epitopes within domains of the ER protein could offer a better approach for assessing the ER status in breast cancer patients, because it enables the recognition of breast tumors with intact or structurally defective ER proteins.
Applied immunohistochemistry & molecular morphology: AIMM / official publication of the Society for Applied Immunohistochemistry 12/2000; 8(4):275-84. · 1.63 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: A 47-year-old woman developed metastatic melanoma to the right ovary 14 years after the enucleation of the right eye for a choroidal spindle cell melanoma. An immunohistochemical study was performed on paraffin sections of both primary and metastatic melanoma specimens to identify markers of both aggressive phenotype and metastatic potential with particular attention to the anomalous expression of cytokeratin intermediate filament proteins. Neoplastic cells of both primary and metastatic tumors immunostained positively for S-100, HMB45, MART-1, and vimentin antibodies, but they were negative for cytokeratins 1-19, 8, 18, and 8,18; <10% of neoplastic cells in both the primary and the metastatic melanomas immunostained for Ki-67 proliferating antigen using MIB-1 antibody. We speculate that the indolent behavior of this ovarian metastasis is reflected by the absence of coexpression of cytokeratins 8 and 18 with vimentin. This case supports the practical value of using this panel of antibodies to evaluate the aggressive potential of uveal melanomas.
Applied immunohistochemistry & molecular morphology: AIMM / official publication of the Society for Applied Immunohistochemistry 12/2000; 8(4):329-33. · 1.63 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: The arterial wall in aged animals shows an increased susceptibility to develop atherosclerotic lesions, although the mechanisms by which aging acts are still unclear. We investigated early aortic lesions in aged rabbits (5 to 6 years old, AH group) and young rabbits (2 months old, YH group) after 2 months of 0.2% cholesterol feeding. Fatty streaks or spots mainly in the proximal segments occupied a relative surface area that was greater in AH than in YH rabbits, although plasma cholesterol and lipoprotein levels did not differ. YH lesions showed an irregular endothelial profile mainly from accumulations of large, rounded, RAM 11-positive macrophagic foam cells. There was a higher percentage of myocytic, CD-5-positive, proliferating, and terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase-mediated dUTP nick end-labeling (TUNEL)-positive cells and larger accumulation of glycosaminoglycans in AH fatty streaks than in YH lesions. Ligation-mediated polymerase chain reaction confirmed differences in apoptosis. Early fibromuscular coats and subendothelial plasma-like insudate were also observed in AH lesions. Aged-matched normocholesterolemic rabbits showed a diffuse aortic intimal thickening composed of myocytic cells with a synthetic phenotype and extracellular matrix rich in glycosaminoglycans. In addition, in aged rabbits, we observed a spontaneous increase of monocytes adhering to the endothelial surface and a reduced expression of endothelial nitric oxide synthase in areas distant from the branches. These plasma cholesterol-independent spontaneous changes in the aortic wall of aged rabbits seem to act as a multiple atherogenic risk factor. Moreover, age-related differences in the distribution, composition, and proliferative and apoptotic rates represent crucial events during the progression of early fatty streaks to advanced plaques.
Arteriosclerosis Thrombosis and Vascular Biology 05/2000; 20(4):1123-36. · 6.37 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: Atherosclerotic plaques are heterogeneous vascular lesions. Changes in cell plaque composition are fundamental events inside the plaque microenvironment that are strictly related to the clinical outcome of these lesions (organ damage). The knowledge of these modifications may help to better understand the pathophysiological mechanisms of atherosclerosis.
We report on a flow cytometry method to characterize and quantify the cell subpopulations in human atherosclerotic plaques. Cells were obtained from endarterectomy specimens after collagenase digestion. Both surface and intracytoplasmic antigens were labeled.
Our data demonstrated that the method we described allowed the characterization of cell populations that compose the atherosclerotic plaque, avoiding contamination by tunica media smooth muscle cells and the noise of cellular debris. Moreover this validation study showed that about 50% of cells in the atherosclerotic plaques are inflammatory mononuclear cells (T lymphocytes and monocytes/macrophages).
Reproducible quantitative methods for cell population characterization may increase the understanding of pathophysiological mechanisms responsible for plaque progression. The methodology herein described gave us the possibility of quickly calculating the relative amount of each cell population and studying both surface and intracellular markers to analyze the functional stage of the cells. The clinical correlation was not assessed in the present study, because we used a small patient group to validate the method, but should be the subject of further analyses in a larger patient population.
Cytometry 03/2000; 39(2):158-65.