Cell cycle regulatory protein expression in multinucleated giant cells: Do they proliferate?

Author(s):  
Tibor Krenacs
2001 ◽  
Vol 120 (5) ◽  
pp. A191
Author(s):  
Gary E. Wild ◽  
Line Dufresne ◽  
Chantal Cossette ◽  
Kevin A. Waschke ◽  
Alan B.R. Thomson

2021 ◽  
Vol 27 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mate E. Maros ◽  
Peter Balla ◽  
Tamas Micsik ◽  
Zoltan Sapi ◽  
Miklos Szendroi ◽  
...  

Cells of the monocyte macrophage lineage form multinucleated giant cells (GCs) by fusion, which may express some cell cycle markers. By using a comprehensive marker set, here we looked for potential replication activities in GCs, and investigated whether these have diagnostic or clinical relevance in giant cell tumor of bone (GCTB). GC rich regions of 10 primary and 10 first recurrence GCTB cases were tested using immunohistochemistry in tissue microarrays. The nuclear positivity rate of the general proliferation marker, replication licensing, G1/S-phase, S/G2/M-phase, mitosis promoter, and cyclin dependent kinase (CDK) inhibitor reactions was analyzed in GCs. Concerning Ki67, moderate SP6 reaction was seen in many GC nuclei, while B56 and Mib1 positivity was rare, but the latter could be linked to more aggressive (p = 0.012) phenotype. Regular MCM6 reaction, as opposed to uncommon MCM2, suggested an initial DNA unwinding. Early replication course in GCs was also supported by widely detecting CDK4 and cyclin E, for the first time, and confirming cyclin D1 upregulation. However, post-G1-phase markers CDK2, cyclin A, geminin, topoisomerase-2a, aurora kinase A, and phospho-histone H3 were rare or missing. These were likely silenced by upregulated CDK inhibitors p15INK4b, p16INK4a, p27KIP1, p53 through its effector p21WAF1 and possibly cyclin G1, consistent with the prevention of DNA replication. In conclusion, the upregulation of known and several novel cell cycle progression markers detected here clearly verify early replication activities in GCs, which are controlled by cell cycle arresting CDK inhibitors at G1 phase, and support the functional maturation of GCs in GCTB.


2006 ◽  
Vol 24 (7) ◽  
pp. 1152-1160 ◽  
Author(s):  
William R. Jarnagin ◽  
David S. Klimstra ◽  
Michael Hezel ◽  
Mithat Gonen ◽  
Yuman Fong ◽  
...  

Purpose Biliary tract adenocarcinomas (BTAs), although anatomically related, arise through ill-defined and possibly different location-related pathogenetic pathways. This clinicopathologic study characterizes differences in cell cycle–regulatory protein expression across the spectrum of BTA. Methods Tissue microarrays were prepared from paraffin-embedded surgical specimens with triplicate cores of BTA and benign tissue. Immunohistochemical expression of p53, cyclin D1, p21, Bcl2, p27, Mdm2, and Ki-67 was assessed, and the results were correlated with pathologic variables and survival. Hierarchical clustering was used to partition the data based on protein expression, and then the data were analyzed according to anatomic location. Results Tissue from 128 surgical patients (1992 to 2002) was obtained. Tumor sites of origin were intrahepatic cholangiocarcinoma (IH; n = 23), hilar cholangiocarcinoma (Hilar; n = 54), gallbladder (GB; n = 32), and distal bile duct (Distal; n = 19). p27 expression decreased progressively from proximal to distal in the biliary tree and correlated with location-related differences in outcome; cyclin D1 and Bcl2 overexpression also varied according to anatomic site. Aberrant p53 staining and cyclin D1 overexpression were lower in papillary tumors compared with the more common sclerosing tumors. The expression profiles of GB and Hilar were more similar to each other than either was to IH or Distal (86% clustering in the first partition). After an R0 resection, overexpression of Mdm2 (P = .0062) and absent p27 expression (P = .0165) independently predicted poor outcome. Conclusion BTAs differentially express cell cycle–regulatory proteins based on tumor location and morphology. Prognostic roles were identified for Mdm2 and p27. Overlap in the pathogenesis of GB and Hilar tumors was suggested.


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