## Abstract Somatic cell hybrids between either normal human fibroblasts, phenotypically normal mouse fibroblasts or mouse peritoneal macrophages and HT1080 human diploid fibrosarcoma cells were studied for their ability to form tumors in nude mice. The results of this study indicate that tumorigen
The expression and localization of amylase in normal and malignant glands of the endometrium and endocervix
โ Scribed by Y. S. Lee; G. C. Raju
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1988
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 515 KB
- Volume
- 155
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0022-3417
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
Amylase activity was studied in 70 specimens of normal endometrium, 21 normal endocervices, 19 endometrial carcinomas, and 20 endocervical adenocarcinomas. Amylase was observed in the secretory (8.7 per cent) but not in the proliferative phase of the menstrual cycle. It is possible that the presence of amylase activity may serve a functional role in the degradation of glycogen to glucose in the secretory endometrium. The great majority (90.5 per cent) of uterine cervices showed strong and extensive staining of the endocervical glands for amylase. No glycogen was demonstrated and the role of amylase in endocervical glands remains obscure. Amylase was observed in one (5.3 per cent) out of 19 cases of endometrial carcinoma, and the presence of this enzyme may be considered a eutopic rather than an ectopic expression. Amylase was not detected in any of the endocervical adenocarcinomas examined. This study has shown a complete loss of amylase activity in malignant transformation of endocervical glands and this could be attributable to the immature nature of de-differentiated neoplastic cells.
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
Using direct immunofluorescence, lesions from 266 human breast specimens were studied for the presence of IgA, IgM, or IgG localization. The lesions included benign elements from 66 subcutaneous mastectomy specimens in which the absence of simultaneous breast malignancy was documented, primary breas
Uteroglobin, first reported in 1968 as a steroid secreted in rabbit uterine fluid during early pregnancy, is a progesterone-regulated and progesterone-binding protein. There is evidence that indicates that uteroglobin is inversely correlated to neoplastic growth but its role to endometrial carcinoge
Different feature sets (geometric, densitometric, and textural) derived from DNA and nuclear protein staining were evaluated for their use in describing atrophic, secretory, and proliferative endometrium, and well-differentiated stage I and moderately differentiated stage I adenocarcinomas of the en