Literature DB >> 11299819

Overexpression of placental tissue protein 17b/TIP47 in cervical dysplasias and cervical carcinoma.

G N Than1, T Turóczy, B Sümegi, N G Than, S Bellyei, H Bohn, G Szekeres.   

Abstract

In our previous Western- and Northern-blot investigations, high over-expression of placental protein 17b/TIP47 was detected in extracts of human cervical carcinoma tissues compared to normal conditions of the cervical tissue. PP17b serum levels were also elevated in untreated cervical carcinoma patients compared to healthy controls. In the present study, the expression pattern of PP17 proteins was investigated in various cervical dysplasias and in cervical carcinoma tissue specimens by the streptavidin-biotin immunoperoxidase technique using PP17-specific antiserum. In normal third-trimester human placentas, which served as positive controls, mainly cytoplasmic PP17 immunostaining of syncytiotrophoblasts and chorionic trophoblasts was observed. Normal human uterine cervical squamous and glandular epithelia were negative or weakly positive, while in low grade dysplasias (CIN I-II) only the cytoplasms of dysplastic cells were weakly positive or positive; in high grade dysplasias (CIN III/ISC) cytoplasms of the dysplastic cells were strongly positive. Normal and superficial cells in the differentiated zones were negative in all tissue specimens. In cases of invasive epithelial cervical carcinomas, small basal-type tumour cells were mostly negative whilst cells with squamous differentiation were strongly positive for PP17. Our hypotheses for this newly detected phenomenon are briefly discussed.

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Year:  2001        PMID: 11299819

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Anticancer Res        ISSN: 0250-7005            Impact factor:   2.480


  5 in total

1.  Solution structure studies of monomeric human TIP47/perilipin-3 reveal a highly extended conformation.

Authors:  Robert M G Hynson; Cy M Jeffries; Jill Trewhella; Simon Cocklin
Journal:  Proteins       Date:  2012-05-25

2.  Immunohistochemical staining for adipophilin, perilipin and TIP47.

Authors:  K Muthusamy; G Halbert; F Roberts
Journal:  J Clin Pathol       Date:  2006-03-23       Impact factor: 3.411

3.  Genome-wide association study identifies 14 novel risk alleles associated with basal cell carcinoma.

Authors:  Harvind S Chahal; Wenting Wu; Katherine J Ransohoff; Lingyao Yang; Haley Hedlin; Manisha Desai; Yuan Lin; Hong-Ji Dai; Abrar A Qureshi; Wen-Qing Li; Peter Kraft; David A Hinds; Jean Y Tang; Jiali Han; Kavita Y Sarin
Journal:  Nat Commun       Date:  2016-08-19       Impact factor: 14.919

4.  The Expression of Perilipin Family Proteins can be used as Diagnostic Markers of Liposarcoma and to Differentiate Subtypes.

Authors:  Qiaochu Zhang; Pengpeng Zhang; Bingcheng Li; Hongwei Dang; Jinfang Jiang; Lian Meng; Haijun Zhang; Yangyang Zhang; Xiaomeng Wang; Qianru Li; Yang Wang; Chunxia Liu; Feng Li
Journal:  J Cancer       Date:  2020-04-07       Impact factor: 4.207

5.  Roles of Perilipins in Diseases and Cancers.

Authors:  Pengpeng Zhang; Lian Meng; Lingxie Song; Juan Du; Shutong Du; Wenwen Cui; Chunxia Liu; Feng Li
Journal:  Curr Genomics       Date:  2018-05       Impact factor: 2.236

  5 in total

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