Introduction: Patients with serrated polyposis syndrome (SPS) have an increased risk to develop colorectal cancer (CRC). Due to an abundance of serrated polyps, these CRCs are assumed to arise mainly through the serrated neoplasia pathway rather than through the classical adenoma-carcinoma pathway. We aimed to evaluate the pathogenetic routes of CRCs in patients with SPS.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHyperplastic polyposis syndrome (HPS) is characterized by the presence of multiple colorectal serrated polyps and is associated with an increased colorectal cancer (CRC) risk. The mixture of distinct precursor lesion types and malignancies in HPS provides a unique model to study the canonical pathway and a proposed serrated CRC pathway in humans. To establish which CRC pathways play a role in HPS and to obtain new support for the serrated CRC pathway, we assessed the molecular characteristics of polyps (n = 84) and CRCs (n = 19) in 17 patients with HPS versus control groups of various sporadic polyps (n = 59) and sporadic microsatellite-stable CRCs (n = 16).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground & Aims: The finding of bone morphogenetic protein (BMP) receptor 1a mutations in juvenile polyposis suggests that BMPs are important in colorectal cancer (CRC). We investigated the BMP pathway in sporadic CRC.
Methods: We investigated BMP receptor (BMPR) expression using immunoblotting and sequenced BMPR2 in CRC cell lines.
Contemporary pathology involves an emerging role for molecular diagnostics. Current tissue handling procedures [ie, formalin fixation and paraffin embedment (FFPE)] have their origin in the aim to obtain good tissue morphology and optimal results within immunohistochemistry. Unfortunately, FFPE is notorious for its poor RNA conservation capacities.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Transforming growth factor beta (TGFbeta) is important in colorectal cancer (CRC) progression. Bone morphogenetic proteins (BMPs), a subgroup within the TGFbeta superfamily, recently also have been implicated in CRC, but their precise role in CRC has yet to be investigated.
Methods: The authors used a tissue microarray and immunohistochemistry of BMP receptors and signal transduction elements in adenomas and CRC specimens to elucidate the role of BMP signaling in CRC carcinogenesis.
Three patients with graft-versus-host-like enterocolonopathy are reported. Their history was remarkable for thymoma and other autoimmune manifestations such as thrombocytopenia, red cell aplasia, interface dermatitis, Sjogren sialadenits, vanishing bile ducts and rheumatoid arthritis. In all patients, microsatellite analysis showed the autologous nature of the lymphocytes in the affected organs ruling out GVHD.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMany studies examine the molecular genetics of gastric cancer, but few look at young patients in particular and there is no comparison of molecular expression between early-onset gastric cancer (< or = 45 years old) and conventional gastric cancers. Expression of cycloxygenase-2 (COX-2) is elevated in gastric adenocarcinomas compared to non-neoplastic mucosa, and in light of studies showing reduced risk of gastric cancer in nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug users, we have chosen to investigate the expression of COX-2 and related molecules in 113 early-onset gastric cancers and compare it with 91 conventional gastric cancers, using tissue microarrays. These markers include molecules known to be important in conventional gastric carcinogenesis, such as E-Cadherin, p53, COX-2, Trefoil Factor-1 (TFF1), beta-catenin, p16 and c-myc; as well as molecules not yet described as being important in gastric cancer, such as the transcription factor c-jun, the COX-2 mRNA stabilizer HuR, and C/EBP-beta, a transcription factor for COX-2.
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