Alterations of MUC1 and MUC3 expression in gastric carcinoma: relevance to patient clinicopathological features | Journal of...
Mucin products in normal gastric mucosa, intestinal metaplasia, and gastric carcinoma. The expression of the mucin genes was ... We have described the profile of currently known gastric mucin genes found in normal gastric mucosa, intestinal metaplasia, and ... Of the 39 specimens obtained from pericancerous mucosa, 29 showed evidence of intestinal metaplasia. The sections were ... Figure 2 shows typical immunohistochemical results for the mucins in gastric mucosa undergoing intestinal metaplasia. Although ...
Silencing of the hPOT1 gene by RNA inference promotes apoptosis and inhibits proliferation and aggressive phenotype of gastric...
Methods The gastric expression of hPOT1 was examined in normal gastric mucosa (n=25), intestinal metaplasia (n=20), gastric ... Results The hPOT1 MOD was progressively increased from the normal mucosa to intestinal metaplasia, dysplasia, and gastric ...
Expression of CD44H and CD44v3 in normal oesophagus, Barrett mucosa and oesophageal carcinoma. | Journal of Clinical Pathology
... antral and intestinal subtypes of Barrett oesophagus expressed CD44H only, the distribution being focal in non-dysplastic and ... AIMS: To examine CD44H and CD44v3 expression in normal gastric and small bowel mucosa, normal and Barrett oesophagus, and ... CD44v3 expression, usually not observed in normal or neoplastic gastric mucosa, was present in normal squamous epithelium and ... CONCLUSIONS: CD44H is expressed in the proliferating areas of both normal squamous epithelium and Barrett mucosa. CD44H ...
Mucosal immunology of vaccines against pathogenic nasopharyngeal bacteria | Journal of Clinical Pathology
Human nasopharyngeal mucosa is the natural reservoir of N meningitidis, and the organism is transferred from person to person ... Migration of antigen-presenting B cells from peripheral to mucosal lymphoid tissues may induce intestinal antigen-specific IgA ... Haemophilus influenzae type b, Streptococcus pneumoniae, and Neisseria meningitidis colonise the mucosa of the human upper ... and it is possible that they may be replaced in the mucosa by other serotypes after immunisation. In the case of N meningitides ...