ObjectiveTo study the relationship between the expression of sialyl Lewisx (SLeX) antigen and CD44v6 products and biological behaviors in cholangiocarcinomas. MethodsThe expression of SLeX and CD44v6 in 43 cases of cholangiocarcinoma tissue was respectively investigated by catalyzed signal amplification immunohistochemical technique.The relationship between expression of SLeX and CD44v6 and the clinicopathological factors of cholangiocarcinoma was analyzed.ResultsThe positive expression rate of SLeX and CD44v6 in cholangiocarcinoma was 67.4% and 62.8% respectively,which was significantly higher than that in control group (20.0%,P<0.05).The high level expression of SLeX and CD44v6 were correlated with the TNM phase, differentiation degree,metastasis to lymph nodes and viscera in cholangiocarcinoma (P<0.05). Moreover,there was a positive correlation between the SLeX and CD44v6 expression in cholangiocarcinoma (r=0.49,P<0.001).Conclusion Expression of SLeX and CD44v6 could be helpful in predicting the biological behavior and prognosis of cholangiocarcinoma.
Carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA)was measured with ABC immunohistochemistry method in fourty-one gastric cancer tissues and sixty-six tissue from normal stomach and gastric benign lesions. The study revealed that the reactive signals in the former were ber than those in the latter. Simultaneously, CEA localized mainly in the cytoplasm or stroma in the cancerous tissue, but in normal gastric tissue or benign gastric lession, CEA distributed mainly in the margin of gland with gastric depression or membranous type. The result also revealed that the distribution patterns of ECA were linked with the cell growth types and infiltrating of gastric cancer. The authors consider that the expression state of CEA in gastric cancer is correlated with its biological behavior, and distribution patterns of CEA are more clinically significant than reactive intensities in the tissue. Patients have different prognosis with different CEA distribution patterns in tissue though their pathological types and TNM stages are the same.
Objective To study the biological behavior of osteoblast and vascular endothelial cell culture. Methods The osteoblasts and vascular endothelial cells were obtained from calvarial bone and renal cortox of 2-week rabbits respectively. The experiment were divided into group A (osteoblasts), group B (vascular endothelial cells) and group C(co-cultured osteoblasts and vascular endothelial cells). The cells were identified with cytoimmunochemical staining. The cellular biological behavior and compatibilitywere observed under inverted phase contrast microscope and with histological staining. The cells viability and alkaline phosphatase(ALP) activity were measured. Results The cytoimmunochemical staining showed that the cultured cells were osteoblasts and vascular endothelial cells .The cellular compatibility of osteoblasts and vascular endothelial cells was good. The ALP activity was higher in group C than in group A and group B(P<0.01), and it was higher in group A than in group B(P<0.05). In group C, the cellproliferation were increased slowly early, but fast later. Conclusion Thecellular compatibility of osteoblasts and vascular endothelial cells were good. The vascular endothelial cells can significantly increased the osteoblast viability and ALP activity,and the combined cultured cells have greater proliferation ability.
Objective To detect the expressions of RhoA and Snail in gastric cancer tissues, and explore the relati-onship of these expressions to the biological behavior of the gastric cancer. Methods The expressions of RhoA and Snail protein in the paraffin-embedded specimens of 189 gastric cancer patients were detected by immunohistochemical method. The relationships of their expressions to clinicopathologic features of gastric cancer or survival, and the relevance of RhoA expression and Snail expression were analyzed. Results ① The expressions of RhoA and Snail protein in the gastric cancer tissues were significantly higher than those in the paraneoplastic tissue (RhoA:P=0.008;Snail:P=0.000) and the normal gastric mucosa tissue (RhoA:P=0.010;Snail:P=0.000);The expression of RhoA had no significant difference between the paraneoplastic tissue and the normal gastric mucosa tissue (P=0.782), however, the expression of Snail in the paraneoplastic tissue was significantly higher than that in the normal gastric mucosa tissue (P=0.001). ② The expression of RhoA in the gastric cancer tissue was associated with TNM staging and Lauren type (P<0.05), but it was not associated with tumor diameter, lymph node metastasis, or differentiation degree (P>0.05). The expression of Snail in the gastric cancer tissue was associated with tumor diameter, lymph node metastasis, differentiation degree, TNM staging, or Lauren type (P<0.05). The expressions of RhoA and Snail in the gastric cancer tissue were not associated with patients’ gender and age (P>0.05). ③ The expression of RhoA protein was significantly positi-vely correlated with Snail protein in the gastric cancer(rs=0.203, P=0.005). ④ The TNM staging of tumor, RhoA and Snail expressions, and lymph node metastasis were all the independent prognostic factors of postoperative gastric cancer patients (P<0.05). Conclusions RhoA and Snail proteins express in gastric cancer tissues, and involves in gastric carcinogenesis and the development process, and RhoA/Snail signaling pathway may play an important role in invasion and metastasis of gastric cancer.