Gastrin releasing peptide in human neuroendocrine tumours
β Scribed by David G. Bostwick; Klaus G. Bensch
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1985
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 734 KB
- Volume
- 147
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0022-3417
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β¦ Synopsis
Neuroendocrine tumours of the lung and gut are known to possess bombesin-like immunoreactivity. The recent observation that gastrin releasing peptide (GRP), a 27 amino acid peptide isolated from the porcine intestine, may be the mammalian analogue of bombesin led us to look for this peptide in a variety of human neoplasms. Formalin-fixed tissues from 85 tumours were examined by the immunoperoxidase technique, using specific antisera to the GRP molecule (1-27) and the GRP fragment (1-16). Intense cytoplasmic GRP immunoreactivity was seen in thyroid medullary carcinomas (3/3), carcinoids of lung, pancreas, and intestine (22/36), and paragangliomas (2/3). Less frequent staining was present in pulmonary small cell (oat cell) carcinomas (1/8) and pituitary adenomas (1/6). Complete absence of immunoreactivity was observed in three phaeochromocytomas, five Merkel cell tumours, six neuroblastomas and 15 non-neuroendocrine tumours. Normal neuroendocrine cells of the thyroid (C-cells) and bronchial mucosa (Kulchitsky cells) exhibited GRP immunoreactivity; nerve fibres from all sites failed to demonstrate staining for GRP. In each positive case, the pattern of staining for GRP (1-27) and GRP (1-16) was identical, although the GRP (1-16) immunostaining was weaker. These findings indicate that bombesin immunoreactivity in human neuroendocrine cells and tumours is attributable to GRP-like molecules and that GRP is a useful marker of neuroendocrine differentiation in many tumours.
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## Abstract Levels of gastrinβreleasing peptide (GRP) were determined by radioimmunoassay in human normal main and lobar bronchus and parenchymal lung tissue extracts. It was found that the level of GRP differed significantly between all 3 areas. The concentration of GRP was statistically higher in
## Abstract Human prostate cancer (PC) overexpresses the gastrinβreleasing peptide receptor (GRPR). Radiolabeled GRPRβtargeting analogs of bombesin (BN) have successfully been introduced as potential tracers for visualization and treatment of GRPRβoverexpressing tumors. A previous study showed GRPR
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