| Literature DB >> 20089166 |
Silvia Licciulli1, Chiara Luise, Andrea Zanardi, Luca Giorgetti, Giuseppe Viale, Luisa Lanfrancone, Roberta Carbone, Myriam Alcalay.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Pirin (PIR) is a highly conserved nuclear protein originally isolated as an interactor of NFI/CTF1 transcription/replication factor. It is a member of the functionally diverse cupin superfamily and its activity has been linked to different biological and molecular processes, such as regulation of transcription, apoptosis, stress response and enzymatic processes. Although its precise role in these functions has not yet been defined, PIR expression is known to be deregulated in several human malignancies.Entities:
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Year: 2010 PMID: 20089166 PMCID: PMC2823719 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2121-11-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Cell Biol ISSN: 1471-2121 Impact factor: 4.241
Figure 1Representative examples of PIR immunohistochemical staining in a melanoma-specific TMA. (a) Nuclear staining in normal melanocytes (indicated by arrows) from a healthy skin tissue sample; (b) Primary infiltrating melanoma with low nuclear staining; (c) Mixed nuclear and cytoplasmic staining in an intra-epidermal melanoma; (d) Intense staining both in the nucleus and in the cytoplasm in metastatic melanoma; (e) strong exclusive cytoplasmic staining in metastatic melanoma. To detect immunoreactions VECTOR VIP was used as peroxidase substrate in order to optimize differences between between the reaction product (purple) and background melanin. Original magnification 400× for a, and 200× for b-e, scale bar 100 μm. Insets show 400× magnification. (f) Quantitative analysis of PIR subcellular distribution in the TMA among Radial Growth Phase (RGP), Vertical Growth Phase (VGP) and Metastatic Melanoma (MM); Clark level is indicated.
Figure 2ICA antibody spotting scheme. Each cell line was plated in one well of a 4-well slide; each antibody was spotted in 7 replicas on each well (see Methods for details)
Figure 3ICA results. Panels of ICA images showing (a) primary melanoma cell lines and (b) metastatic melanoma cell lines. Individual spots were acquired with 20× objective: each image shows a representative area of one spot of the indicated antibody. (c) Analysis of ICA results (see text for details) for primary melanoma cell lines; (d) analysis of ICA results for metastatic melanoma cell lines. Left panels refer to PIR normalized cytoplasmic staining; right panels refer to ShcA normalized cytoplasmic staining. ShcA = anti-ShcA antibody; PIR IP = immuno-purified anti-PIR antibody; PIR tot = anti-PIR total serum; P.I. = pre-immune serum.
Figure 4Validation of ICA results by conventional immunofluorescence. PIR subcellular localization pattern was confirmed by conventional Immunofluorescence staining of melanoma cell lines with anti-PIR antibody detected with goat anti-rabbit Cy3. Left panels show PIR staining, right panels show DAPI (63× oil objective magnification). (a) IGR39 (primary melanoma, nuclear staining); (b) WM115 (primary melanoma, nuclear staining); (c) CaCi1962 (metastasis, mixed staining); (d) AdMa1935 (metastasis, cytoplasmic staining); (e) AnSe1965 (metastasis, cytoplasmic staining). Insets show corresponding confocal images of representative cells (100× oil objective). Scale bar, 10 μm. Original greyscale images were presented to avoid digital pseudocoloring with image editing softwares. PIR and DAPI images were kept separate due to overlapping localization in some samples, and for correct visualization of PIR intensity in case of mixed localization in nuclei and cytoplasm.