Purpose: There is still much controversy surrounding the prognostic significance of microscopic tumor cell dissemination in gastric cancer and its correlation with histopathologic parameters. We herein investigate such dissemination, predominantly restricted to the subserosa, in patients with gastric cancer.
Methods: Intraoperative bone marrow aspiration was done in 26 patients undergoing resection of gastric carcinoma.
In a T cell antigen receptor complex (TCR), the clonotypic disulfide-linked Ti heterodimer is noncovalently associated with the invariant CD3 polypeptides. The latter are composed of three monomeric subunits (gamma, delta, epsilon) and either a disulfide-linked homodimer (zeta zeta) or a disulfide-linked heterodimer (zeta eta). The exact stoichiometry of the Ti-CD3 subunits in a given complex is still largely unknown.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe CD3 eta subunit of the T-cell antigen receptor forms a heterodimeric structure with the CD3 zeta subunit in thymus-derived lymphoid cells and is apparently involved in signal transduction through the receptor. Here we report the primary structure of murine CD3 eta as deduced from protein microsequencing and cDNA cloning. The mature protein is divided into three domains: a 9-amino acid extracellular segment, a 21-amino acid transmembrane segment including a negatively charged residue characteristic of CD3 subunits, and a 155-amino acid cytoplasmic tail.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHuman CD4 is the receptor for the gp120 envelope glycoprotein of human immunodeficiency virus and is essential for virus entry into the host cell. Sequence analysis of CD4 has suggested an evolutionary origin from a structure with four immunoglobulin-related domains. Only the two NH2-terminal domains are required to mediate gp120 binding.
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