The action of androgens on the immunocytochemical distribution of mK1, a true tissue kallikrein, was examined in the submandibular gland (SMG) of developing and adult mice by indirect enzyme-labeled and immunogold-labeled antibody methods for light and electron microscopy, respectively. In both sexes at 3 weeks of age, essentially all of the immature granular convoluted tubule (GCT) cells were uniformly immunostained. At 4 weeks of age (the onset of puberty), morphological differences between the two sexes appeared in the GCTs, in which some cells became immunonegative. Thereafter, the immunonegative GCT cells became more abundant in the SMG of males than of females and considerable intercellular variation in staining intensity for mK1 was seen, especially in males. A few slender GCT cells with strong immunoreactivity appeared in GCT segments only in males. Castration of males resulted in an increase in the number of immunopositive GCT cells, whereas administration of dihydrotestosterone (DHT) decreased the number of immunopositive GCT cells in the SMGs of both sexes. Slender GCT cells immunoreactive for mK1 were seen in females treated with DHT for 6 days. However, there were no immunostained slender GCT cells in female SMGs after injection of DHT for 2 weeks. Immunoelectron microscopy disclosed this type of cell in male SMGs, which closely resembles immature GCT cells of prepubertal mice, with a few small secretory granules uniformly labeled with gold particles, a sparse Golgi apparatus and RER, and basal infoldings. In mature male SMGs and in SMGs of DHT-treated females and castrated males, typical GCT cells had a well-developed Golgi apparatus and a net-like RER but few to no basal infoldings, whereas in the female gland equivalent cells had moderately developed RER and some basal infoldings. These results suggest that mK1 is one of the enzymes characteristically present in immature GCT cells and that its synthesis is inhibited in part by androgens, resulting in decreased numbers of immunopositive cells.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/002215540205000202 | DOI Listing |
Diagn Cytopathol
December 2024
Department of Pathology and Division of Diagnostic Pathology, Osaka Medical and Pharmaceutical University, Osaka, Japan.
Granular cell tumors (GCTs) are relatively rare, whereas malignant GCTs are extremely rare. This brief report describes a cytological case of metastatic malignant GCT in the lymph node with immunocytochemical analysis. A 77 years old Japanese female with a history of surgical resection for malignant GCT in the back 8 years earlier presented with swelling of the right neck.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Clin Med
December 2024
Division of Urology, Rutgers Robert Wood Johnson Medical School, New Brunswick, NJ 08901, USA.
Cancers (Basel)
December 2024
Laboratory of Physiology and Toxicology of Reproduction, Institute of Zoology and Biomedical Research, Jagiellonian University, Gronostajowa 9, 30-387 Krakow, Poland.
Background/objectives: Clinical studies have demonstrated a correlation between alterations in the expression level of TRα and TRβ receptors in ovarian cancer cells and overall survival. Celecoxib and GW0742, commonly known as a COX-2 inhibitor and a PPARβ/δ agonist, are novel thyroid hormone receptor antagonists that bind to TRβ or both TRα and TRβ.
Methods: The study was conducted on a non-luteinized ovarian granulosa cell line (HGrC1) and two rare ovarian cancer cell lines (COV434 and KGN).
Clin Case Rep
December 2024
Division of Surgical Oncology, Department of Surgery Eastern Carolina Brody School of Medicine Greenville North Carolina USA.
Granular cell tumors (GCTs) are uncommon soft tissue neoplasms derived from Schwann cells that can arise from various regions of the body. The majority originate from the head and neck. They are rarely encountered in the gastrointestinal tract and even more rarely in the anorectal region.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInt J Surg Case Rep
November 2024
Orthopedic Surgery Department at Prince Sultan Military Medical City, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia.
Introduction: A Giant Cell Tumor (GCT) of the bone is a locally osteolytic tumor made up of mononuclear ovoid stromal cells and multinucleated giant cells. It commonly affects long bones like the distal femur and proximal tibia, but can also develop in the cervical spine during the third and fourth decades of life.
Presentation Of Case: A 20-year-old female presented to the clinic with a complaint of neck pain persisting for one month.
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