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Human Colors-The Rainbow Garden of Pathology: What Gives Normal and Pathologic Tissues Their Color? | LitMetric

Human Colors-The Rainbow Garden of Pathology: What Gives Normal and Pathologic Tissues Their Color?

Arch Pathol Lab Med

From the Department of Hematopathology, MD Anderson Cancer Center, Houston, Texas (Dr Piña-Oviedo); the Department of Pathology, Centro Medico ABC, Mexico City, Mexico (Dr Ortiz-Hidalgo); and the Department of Pathology and Genomic Medicine, Houston Methodist Hospital, Houston, Texas (Dr Ayala).

Published: March 2017

AI Article Synopsis

  • Colors in living organisms play key roles in functions like camouflage, metabolism, and communication, but the specific biological processes behind organ colors in humans are not fully understood.
  • The study aims to answer two questions: why human organs have color and what gives normal and diseased tissues their unique colors, highlighting the role of various biological pigments produced by complex biochemical reactions.
  • Current knowledge about pigment functions mainly comes from studies in other species rather than humans, suggesting the potential of these pigments in providing antioxidant benefits and their use in future therapies for diseases and cancer.

Article Abstract

Context: - Colors are important to all living organisms because they are crucial for camouflage and protection, metabolism, sexual behavior, and communication. Human organs obviously have color, but the underlying biologic processes that dictate the specific colors of organs and tissues are not completely understood. A literature search on the determinants of color in human organs yielded scant information.

Objectives: - To address 2 specific questions: (1) why do human organs have color, and (2) what gives normal and pathologic tissues their distinctive colors?

Data Sources: - Endogenous colors are the result of complex biochemical reactions that produce biologic pigments: red-brown cytochromes and porphyrins (blood, liver, spleen, kidneys, striated muscle), brown-black melanins (skin, appendages, brain nuclei), dark-brown lipochromes (aging organs), and colors that result from tissue structure (tendons, aponeurosis, muscles). Yellow-orange carotenes that deposit in lipid-rich tissues are only produced by plants and are acquired from the diet. However, there is lack of information about the cause of color in other organs, such as the gray and white matter, neuroendocrine organs, and white tissues (epithelia, soft tissues). Neoplastic tissues usually retain the color of their nonneoplastic counterpart.

Conclusions: - Most available information on the function of pigments comes from studies in plants, microorganisms, cephalopods, and vertebrates, not humans. Biologic pigments have antioxidant and cytoprotective properties and should be considered as potential future therapies for disease and cancer. We discuss the bioproducts that may be responsible for organ coloration and invite pathologists and pathology residents to look at a "routine grossing day" with a different perspective.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.5858/arpa.2016-0274-SADOI Listing

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