Literature DB >> 2550122

Coexistence of cytoplasmic and nuclear estrogen receptors. A histochemical study on human mammary cancer and rabbit uterus.

S H Lee1.   

Abstract

Consecutive serial cryostat-frozen sections of 157 human mammary carcinomas and the uteri of six immature New Zealand white rabbits were stained histochemically for cytoplasmic estrogen receptor (ER) and nuclear ER by a fluorescent estrogen compound (Fluorocep Estrogen, Zeus Technologies, Inc., Raritan, NJ) and by a monoclonal antibody immunoperoxidase technique (ER-ICA, Abbott Laboratories, North Chicago, IL), respectively. The percentage of the ER-positive cells in the cancer cell population under observation was estimated and recorded. The results of the cytoplasmic ER assay were compared with those of the nuclear ER assay in each tumor; all cancers with less than 10% ER-positive cancer cells were grouped together as ER-negative tumors, the cancers with 30% or more ER-positive cancer cells as ER-positive tumors, and those with 10% to 29% ER-positive cancer cells as borderline positive. According to this manner of classification, 94% to 97% of the ER-positive mammary carcinomas diagnosed by one histochemical assay would have been identified as such by the other with no more than 10% difference in the ER-positive cell counts. The majority of ER-positive breast cancer cells and practically all of the luminal lining cells of the immature rabbit endometrium had coexistent cytoplasmic and nuclear ER. In the mammary cancers containing less than 30% ER-positive cancer cells, there was a greater (up to 20%) discrepancy in positive cell counts between the cytoplasmic ER assay and the nuclear ER assay. This discrepancy may be due to sampling errors of small clones of ER-positive cancer cells in two adjacent sections, difference in antigenic determinants between the cytoplasmic and the nuclear ER, and the binding sites in the nuclear ER being preoccupied by estrogen. The findings of this study appear to support the hypothesis that there are ER in the cytoplasm and the nucleus of the mammary carcinoma cells and the epithelial cells of the endometrium.

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Year:  1989        PMID: 2550122     DOI: 10.1002/1097-0142(19891001)64:7<1461::aid-cncr2820640717>3.0.co;2-7

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Cancer        ISSN: 0008-543X            Impact factor:   6.860


  3 in total

1.  Estrogenic Effects of the Extracts from the Chinese Yam (Dioscorea opposite Thunb.) and Its Effective Compounds in Vitro and in Vivo.

Authors:  Mengnan Zeng; Li Zhang; Miao Li; Beibei Zhang; Ning Zhou; Yingying Ke; Weisheng Feng; Xiaoke Zheng
Journal:  Molecules       Date:  2018-01-23       Impact factor: 4.411

2.  Finasteride-Induced Inhibition of 5α-Reductase Type 2 Could Lead to Kidney Damage-Animal, Experimental Study.

Authors:  Mirza Saim Baig; Agnieszka Kolasa-Wołosiuk; Anna Pilutin; Krzysztof Safranow; Irena Baranowska-Bosiacka; Joanna Kabat-Koperska; Barbara Wiszniewska
Journal:  Int J Environ Res Public Health       Date:  2019-05-16       Impact factor: 3.390

3.  2-Phenylacetamide Isolated from the Seeds of Lepidium apetalum and Its Estrogen-Like Effects In Vitro and In Vivo.

Authors:  Mengnan Zeng; Meng Li; Miao Li; Beibei Zhang; Benke Li; Li Zhang; Weisheng Feng; Xiaoke Zheng
Journal:  Molecules       Date:  2018-09-07       Impact factor: 4.411

  3 in total

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