104 research outputs found

    Cutaneous Adenoid Cystic Carcinoma with Perineural Invasion Treated by Mohs Micrographic Surgery—A Case Report with Literature Review

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    We report a 58-year-old woman with cutaneous adenoid cystic carcinoma arising on the chest treated with Mohs micrographic surgery. The patient remained tumor-free at 24-month follow-up. To date, only six other cases of cutaneous adenoid cystic carcinoma were reportedly managed by Mohs surgery. Cutaneous adenoid cystic carcinoma has low potential for distant metastasis but is notorious for its aggressive infiltrative growth pattern, frequent perineural invasion, and high risk of local recurrence after excision. We propose that Mohs surgery is an ideal method to achieve margin-free removal of cutaneous adenoid cystic carcinoma. A brief literature review is provided

    Chronically KIT-Stimulated Clonally-Derived Human Mast Cells Show Heterogeneity in Different Tissue Microenvironments

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    Human mast cell precursors arise in the bone marrow and circulate to different tissue microenvironments, where they develop distinct phenotypes that may be characterized by differential expression of the serine protease, chymase. The growth and development of mast cells is stimulated by mast cell growth factor, which is also known as kit ligand because its obligate receptor is KIT, the protein product of the c-KIT proto-oncogene. The in vivo influence of the KIT-kit ligand axis on the phenotype of human mast cells has not been determined. We used immunohistochemistry to detect in situ expression of tryptase and chymase by mast cells of a patient with urticaria pigmentosa and aggressive systemic mastocytosis, whose pathologic mast cells are clonally derived and chronically stimulated by KIT because they all contain the same point mutation causing constitutive activation of KIT. Mast cells in both spleen and skin expressed tryptase, but only in the skin did a majority of mast cells express chymase. We conclude that chronic stimulation of the KIT-kit ligand axis does not irrevocably commit mast cells to a chymase-positive or chymase-negative phenotype. These findings suggest that factors other than kit ligand predominate in determining mast cell phenotype

    Regulation of Transgenic Class II Major Histocompatibility Genes in Murine Langerhans Cells

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    I-E is a class II major histocompatibility complex molecule normally expressed by Langerhans cells, A series of transgenic mice were developed previously that carry Eαd gene constructs with promoter-region deletions that cause expression of I-E by different cell types when maintained on a B6 (I-E[–]) genetic background. To study cis-acting gene sequences that regulate expression of class II proteins by Langerhans cells, we identified trans genie I-E expression by tissue immunoperoxidase staining and by epidermal cell suspension lmmunofluorescence cytometry. Mice with a transgene containing 1.4 kilobase pairs (kb) of flanking sequence 5' to the Eα initiation site expressed barely detectable levels of I-E on a tiny percentage of Langerhans cells, indicating that sequences promoting Langerhans cell expression of Eα exist between 2.0 and 1.4 kb 5' of the Eα initiation site. Removal of an additional 170 bp of 5' flanking sequence caused near-normal levels of expression by approximately one third of epidermal Langerhans cells, which contrasts with studies that showed minimal transgene expression by splenic dendritic cells in these animals, Thus, sequences between 1.4 and 1.23 kb 5' of the Eα initiation site decrease expression of I-E by epidermal Laugerhans cells, but enable I-E expression by splenic dendritic cells, These studies identify Langerhans cell-specific regulatory sequences and genetic regions controlling major histocompatibility complex class II gene expression in Langerhans cells and splenic dendritic cells. The genetic regions identified may be particularly important because differential regulation of class II major histocompatibility complex protein synthesis by Langerhans cells and dendritic cells may be crucial to immune functions of intact animals

    Human Skin/SCID Mouse Chimeras as an In Vivo Model for Human Cutaneous Mast Cell Hyperplasia

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    Human skin xenografted to mice with severe combined immunodeficiency syndrome (SCID) was evaluated to determine the integrity and fate of human dermal mast cells. There was an approximately 3-fold increase in number of dermal mast cells by 3 mo after engraftment (p < 0.05). These cells were responsive to conventional mast cell secretagogues and were confirmed to be of human origin by ultrastructural characterization of granule substructure and by reactivity for the human mast cell proteinase, chymase. CD1a+ Langerhans cells, also bone marrow–derived cells, failed to show evidence of concomitant hyperplasia, and increased mast cell number was not associated with alterations in number of dermal vascular profiles identified immunohistochemically for human CD31. RT-PCR analysis demonstrated human but not murine stem cell factor (SCF; also termed mast cell growth factor, c-kit ligand) mRNA in xenografts. Epidermal reactivity for stem cell factor protein shifted from a cytoplasmic pattern to an intercellular pattern by 3 mo after engraftment, suggesting a secretory phenotype, as previously documented for human cutaneous mastocytosis. The majority (>90%) of mast cells demonstrated membrane reactivity for human SCF at the time points of peak hyperplasia. These data establish SCID mouse recipients of human skin xenografts as a potential in vivo model for cutaneous mast cell hyperplasia

    MAGE I Transcription Factors Regulate KAP1 and KRAB Domain Zinc Finger Transcription Factor Mediated Gene Repression

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    Class I MAGE proteins (MAGE I) are normally expressed only in developing germ cells but are aberrantly expressed in many cancers. They have been shown to promote tumor survival, aggressive growth, and chemoresistance but the underlying mechanisms and MAGE I functions have not been fully elucidated. KRAB domain zinc finger transcription factors (KZNFs) are the largest group of vertebrate transcription factors and regulate neoplastic transformation, tumor suppression, cellular proliferation, and apoptosis. KZNFs bind the KAP1 protein and direct KAP1 to specific DNA sequences where it suppresses gene expression by inducing localized heterochromatin characterized by histone 3 lysine 9 trimethylation (H3me3K9). Discovery that MAGE I proteins also bind to KAP1 prompted us to investigate whether MAGE I can affect KZNF and KAP1 mediated gene regulation. We found that expression of MAGE I proteins, MAGE-A3 or MAGE-C2, relieved repression of a reporter gene by ZNF382, a KZNF with tumor suppressor activity. ChIP of MAGE I (-) HEK293T cells showed KAP1 and H3me3K9 are normally bound to the ID1 gene, a target of ZNF382, but that binding is greatly reduced in the presence of MAGE I proteins. MAGE I expression relieved KAP1 mediated ID1 repression, causing increased expression of ID1 mRNA and ID1 chromatin relaxation characterized by loss of H3me3K9. MAGE I binding to KAP1 also induced ZNF382 poly-ubiquitination and degradation, consistent with loss of ZNF382 leading to decreased KAP1 binding to ID1. In contrast, MAGE I expression caused increased KAP1 binding to Ki67, another KAP1 target gene, with increased H3me3K9 and decreased Ki67 mRNA expression. Since KZNFs are required to direct KAP1 to specific genes, these results show that MAGE I proteins can differentially regulate members of the KZNF family and KAP1 mediated gene repression

    Understanding U.S. regional linguistic variation with Twitter data analysis

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    We analyze a Big Data set of geo-tagged tweets for a year (Oct. 2013–Oct. 2014) to understand the regional linguistic variation in the U.S. Prior work on regional linguistic variations usually took a long time to collect data and focused on either rural or urban areas. Geo-tagged Twitter data offers an unprecedented database with rich linguistic representation of fine spatiotemporal resolution and continuity. From the one-year Twitter corpus, we extract lexical characteristics for twitter users by summarizing the frequencies of a set of lexical alternations that each user has used. We spatially aggregate and smooth each lexical characteristic to derive county-based linguistic variables, from which orthogonal dimensions are extracted using the principal component analysis (PCA). Finally a regionalization method is used to discover hierarchical dialect regions using the PCA components. The regionalization results reveal interesting linguistic regional variations in the U.S. The discovered regions not only confirm past research findings in the literature but also provide new insights and a more detailed understanding of very recent linguistic patterns in the U.S

    Interaction of the Deubiquitinating Enzyme Ubp2 and the E3 Ligase Rsp5 Is Required for Transporter/Receptor Sorting in the Multivesicular Body Pathway

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    Protein ubiquitination is essential for many events linked to intracellular protein trafficking. We sought to elucidate the possible involvement of the S. cerevisiae deubiquitinating enzyme Ubp2 in transporter and receptor trafficking after we (this study) and others established that affinity purified Ubp2 interacts stably with the E3 ubiquitin ligase Rsp5 and the (ubiquitin associated) UBA domain containing protein Rup1. UBP2 interacts genetically with RSP5, while Rup1 facilitates the tethering of Ubp2 to Rsp5 via a PPPSY motif. Using the uracil permease Fur4 as a model reporter system, we establish a role for Ubp2 in membrane protein turnover. Similar to hypomorphic rsp5 alleles, cells deleted for UBP2 exhibited a temporal stabilization of Fur4 at the plasma membrane, indicative of perturbed protein trafficking. This defect was ubiquitin dependent, as a Fur4 N-terminal ubiquitin fusion construct bypassed the block and restored sorting in the mutant. Moreover, the defect was absent in conditions where recycling was absent, implicating Ubp2 in sorting at the multivesicular body. Taken together, our data suggest a previously overlooked role for Ubp2 as a positive regulator of Rsp5-mediated membrane protein trafficking subsequent to endocytosis

    Skipping of Exons by Premature Termination of Transcription and Alternative Splicing within Intron-5 of the Sheep SCF Gene: A Novel Splice Variant

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    Stem cell factor (SCF) is a growth factor, essential for haemopoiesis, mast cell development and melanogenesis. In the hematopoietic microenvironment (HM), SCF is produced either as a membrane-bound (−) or soluble (+) forms. Skin expression of SCF stimulates melanocyte migration, proliferation, differentiation, and survival. We report for the first time, a novel mRNA splice variant of SCF from the skin of white merino sheep via cloning and sequencing. Reverse transcriptase (RT)-PCR and molecular prediction revealed two different cDNA products of SCF. Full-length cDNA libraries were enriched by the method of rapid amplification of cDNA ends (RACE-PCR). Nucleotide sequencing and molecular prediction revealed that the primary 1519 base pair (bp) cDNA encodes a precursor protein of 274 amino acids (aa), commonly known as ‘soluble’ isoform. In contrast, the shorter (835 and/or 725 bp) cDNA was found to be a ‘novel’ mRNA splice variant. It contains an open reading frame (ORF) corresponding to a truncated protein of 181 aa (vs 245 aa) with an unique C-terminus lacking the primary proteolytic segment (28 aa) right after the D175G site which is necessary to produce ‘soluble’ form of SCF. This alternative splice (AS) variant was explained by the complete nucleotide sequencing of splice junction covering exon 5-intron (5)-exon 6 (948 bp) with a premature termination codon (PTC) whereby exons 6 to 9/10 are skipped (Cassette Exon, CE 6–9/10). We also demonstrated that the Northern blot analysis at transcript level is mediated via an intron-5 splicing event. Our data refine the structure of SCF gene; clarify the presence (+) and/or absence (−) of primary proteolytic-cleavage site specific SCF splice variants. This work provides a basis for understanding the functional role and regulation of SCF in hair follicle melanogenesis in sheep beyond what was known in mice, humans and other mammals
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