Faculty Opinions recommendation of Neuropilins guide preganglionic sympathetic axons and chromaffin cell precursors to establish the adrenal medulla.

Author(s):  
Chaya Kalcheim
2002 ◽  
pp. 381-388 ◽  
Author(s):  
CA Koch ◽  
AO Vortmeyer ◽  
R Diallo ◽  
C Poremba ◽  
TJ Giordano ◽  
...  

OBJECTIVE: To study survivin expression in human adrenal medulla and in benign and malignant pheochromocytoma tissue as a tool to predict tumor metastatic potential and prognosis. DESIGN: Blinded study to assess the role of the anti-survivin antibody in chromaffin cells. METHODS: We performed immunohistochemistry with a purified rabbit-polyclonal anti-survivin antibody on 39 formalin-fixed and paraffin-embedded pheochromocytoma/paraganglioma specimens, and on 10 normal adrenal medulla samples from patients unaffected by a chromaffin cell tumor. Fourteen samples were from 14 patients with benign pheochromocytoma (<8 year follow-up, mean 5.2 years), 18 specimens were from 12 patients with malignant pheochromocytoma (<13 year follow-up, mean 6.3 years), 5 samples were from 2 patients with malignant paraganglioma (<6 year follow-up, mean 4 years), and 2 specimens from 2 patients with benign paraganglioma (<7 year follow-up, mean 5.5 years). Malignancy was defined by metastases in non-chromaffin tissues. Staining intensity with the anti-survivin antibody was scored from 0 (none) to 3+ (heavy). Tissues from human kidney, breast, and melanoma served as controls. RESULTS: All pheochromocytoma/paraganglioma specimens stained either 2+ or 3+. By analysis of variance (ANOVA), there was no statistically significant difference between the staining intensity of benign and malignant samples. All normal adrenal medulla specimens stained positively with anti-survivin but to a lesser degree than the chromaffin cell tumors (P<0.01). CONCLUSIONS: Based on these findings, we conclude that (i) survivin may represent a novel neuroendocrine marker for chromaffin cell tumors, and (ii) survivin does not appear to reliably distinguish benign from malignant pheochromocytomas/paragangliomas and thus does not identify patients at risk of recurrent disease.


1997 ◽  
Vol 35 (2) ◽  
pp. 216-220
Author(s):  
ARTHUR S. TISCHLER ◽  
JAMES F. POWERS ◽  
MEHZAD SHAHSAVARI ◽  
JEFFREY ZIAR ◽  
PANAYIOTIS TSOKAS ◽  
...  

1996 ◽  
Vol 140 (1) ◽  
pp. 115-123 ◽  
Author(s):  
Arthur S. Tischler ◽  
James F. Powers ◽  
John C. Downing ◽  
Jocelyn C. Riseberg ◽  
Mehzad Shahsavari ◽  
...  

1990 ◽  
Vol 73 (3) ◽  
pp. 418-428 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jeffrey H. Kordower ◽  
Massimo S. Fiandaca ◽  
Mary F. D. Notter ◽  
John T. Hansen ◽  
Don M. Gash

✓ Autopsy results on patients and corresponding studies in nonhuman primates have revealed that autografts of adrenal medulla into the striatum, used as a treatment for Parkinson's disease, do not survive well. Because adrenal chromaffin cell viability may be limited by the low levels of available nerve growth factor (NGF) in the striatum, the present study was conducted to determine if transected peripheral nerve segments could provide sufficient levels of NGF to enhance chromaffin cell survival in vitro and in vivo. Aged female rhesus monkeys, rendered hemiparkinsonian by the drug MPTP (n-methyl-4-phenyl-1,2,3,6 tetrahydropyridine), received autografts into the striatum using a stereotactic approach, of either sural nerve or adrenal medulla, or cografts of adrenal medulla and sural nerve (three animals in each group). Cell cultures were established from tissue not used in the grafts. Adrenal chromaffin cells either cocultured with sural nerve segments or exposed to exogenous NGF differentiated into a neuronal phenotype. Chromaffin cell survival, when cografted with sural nerve into the striatum, was enhanced four- to eightfold from between 8000 and 18,000 surviving cells in grafts of adrenal tissue only up to 67,000 surviving chromaffin cells in cografts. In grafts of adrenal tissue only, the implant site consisted of an inflammatory focus. Surviving chromaffin cells, which could be identified by both chromogranin A and tyrosine hydroxylase staining, retained their endocrine phenotype. Cografted chromaffin cells exhibited multipolar neuritic processes and numerous chromaffin granules, and were also immunoreactive for tyrosine hydroxylase and chromogranin A. Blood vessels within the graft were fenestrated, indicating that the blood-brain barrier was not intact. Additionally, cografted chromaffin cells were observed in a postsynaptic relationship with axon terminals from an undetermined but presumably a host origin.


1996 ◽  
Vol 84 (4) ◽  
pp. 685-689 ◽  
Author(s):  
Isao Date ◽  
Takashi Imaoka ◽  
Yasuyuki Miyoshi ◽  
Takeshi Ono ◽  
Shoji Asari ◽  
...  

✓ A 55-year-old woman with severe Parkinson's disease was treated by cografting adrenal medulla with pretransected peripheral nerve into the bilateral caudate nuclei. The patient showed modest improvement of her akinesia; this effect persisted for 1 year after transplantation, when she suddenly died from upper gastrointestinal bleeding unrelated to the grafting procedure. At autopsy, a large number of tyrosine hydroxylase—immunoreactive chromaffin cells were observed within the caudate graft sites and a dense network of host dopaminergic fibers was visualized. This autopsy finding is very important for the field of experimental and clinical chromaffin cell grafting because it is the first evidence that cografts using pretransected peripheral nerve might enhance the survival of chromaffin cells and the recovery of host dopaminergic fibers in humans suffering from Parkinson's disease.


1989 ◽  
Vol 7 (5) ◽  
pp. 439-448 ◽  
Author(s):  
Arthur S. Tischler ◽  
Laurel A. Ruzicka ◽  
Stephen R. Donahue ◽  
Ronald A. DeLellis

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