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Interobserver variability in differentiation of nodal nevus from melanoma micrometastasis in sentinel lymph adenectomy specimens [Meeting Abstract]
Celin, N; Bannan, M; Darvishian, F; Hajdu, C; Nonaka, D; Ye, W; Pei, Z; Melamed, J
ISI:000252180200409
ISSN: 0893-3952
CID: 100682
The association of gastric leptin with oesophageal inflammation and metaplasia
Francois, F; Roper, J; Goodman, A J; Pei, Z; Ghumman, M; Mourad, M; de Perez, A Z Olivares; Perez-Perez, G I; Tseng, C-H; Blaser, M J
BACKGROUND: Gastro-oesophageal reflux disease complications may reflect imbalances between protective and injurious factors. Through its effects on cell growth, leptin may influence oesophageal mucosal homeostasis. AIMS: To determine whether leptin receptors are present in the oesophagus, and whether serum or gastric leptin levels are associated with oesophageal inflammation and metaplasia. METHODS: From patients referred for upper endoscopy, biopsies were obtained from the stomach and distal oesophagus, and serum samples were collected. Patients were classified as having normal, inflamed or Barrett's oesophagus. Quantitative immunohistochemistry was performed on representative sections, and leptin levels in plasma and gastric biopsy samples were determined by specific immunoassay. RESULTS: Of 269 individuals enrolled, 105 were Helicobacter pylori-negative. Of the 88 patients with complete oesophageal biopsies, 44 were normal, 24 were inflamed and 20 were Barrett's oesophagus. Receptors for leptin were highly expressed on oesophageal epithelial cells, with similar density and staining pattern in all three conditions, and plasma and antral leptin levels did not differ significantly. Patients with Barrett's had significantly (p = 0.01) higher fundic leptin levels (median 202 (interquartile range 123-333) pg/mg) compared with normal (126 (78-221) pg/mg) or inflamed (114 (76-195) pg/mg) oesophagus. In multivariate analysis, for every twofold increase in fundic leptin, the odds of having Barrett's was 3.4 times (95% CI 1.5 to 7.6) higher compared with having a normal oesophagus. CONCLUSIONS: Leptin receptor expression on oesophageal epithelial cells provides a pathway for leptin-mediated signal transduction. Variation in gastric leptin production could contribute to differential oesophageal healing and metaplasia progression
PMID: 17761783
ISSN: 1468-3288
CID: 75709
Androgen receptor coactivator ARA70alpha and ARA70beta isoform-specific antibodies: new tools for studies of expression and immunohistochemical localization
Peng, Yi; Chiriboga, Luis; Yee, Herman; Pei, Zhiheng; Wang, Zhenxing; Lee, Peng
ARA70 is a coactivator of androgen receptor (AR), a ligand-dependent transcription factor that plays an important role in prostate cancer. There are 2 variants of ARA70, the full length 70 kd ARA70alpha isoform and the internally spliced 35 kd ARA70beta isoform. Recent studies have suggested different expression and roles of the 2 isoforms in several endocrine malignancies, including prostate, breast, and ovarian cancers. To study the roles of these isoforms in cancers, we produced isoform-specific polyclonal antibodies. The anti-ARA70alpha antibody was raised in rabbits against 326 amino acid peptide corresponding to the internal deletion missing from ARA70beta (ARA70id), whereas the anti-ARA70beta antibody was raised against 18 amino acid polypeptide spanning the splice junction, with Gln-Gln motif unique to ARA70beta. The antisera were affinity purified on CNBr-activated sepharose 4B, and their specificity tested against bacterially expressed, Ni-column-purified ARA70alpha, ARA70beta, and ARA70id. The anti-ARA70alpha antibody recognized ARA70alpha and ARA70id, but not ARA70beta. The anti-ARA70beta antibody was specific to ARA70beta and did not cross-react with ARA70alpha or ARA70id. We then used these antibodies to detect ARA70 isoforms in crude extracts made of prostate cancer cell lines and performed immunohistochemical localization of these proteins in prostate tissues. ARA70beta localized to the cytosol, whereas ARA70alpha was found in the nucleus, supporting the notion of their dissimilar functions
PMID: 18091327
ISSN: 1541-2016
CID: 76112
Case report: Paenibacillus thiaminolyticus: a new cause of human infection, inducing bacteremia in a patient on hemodialysis
Ouyang, Jie; Pei, Zhiheng; Lutwick, Larry; Dalal, Sharvari; Yang, Liying; Cassai, Nicholas; Sandhu, Kuldip; Hanna, Bruce; Wieczorek, Rosemary L; Bluth, Martin; Pincus, Matthew R
Paenibacilli are gram-positive, aerobic bacteria that are related to Bacilli but differ in the DNA encoding their 16S rRNA. Until recently, these organisms were not known to cause human disease. There are now several reports of human infection caused by a few members of this genus, most commonly by P. alvei. We report a human infection in a patient with a permacath for chronic hemodialysis who was found to have bacteremia caused by P. thiaminolyticus, which is an environmental bacterium that has never been found to cause human disease. We identified this bacterium by biochemical tests, cloning, sequencing the genomic DNA encoding its 16S rRNA, growth characteristics, and electron microscopic studies. This constitutes the first report of a human infection caused by this organism
PMCID:2955490
PMID: 18988935
ISSN: 1550-8080
CID: 140207
Fasting gastric leptin levels are elevated in diabetics independent of BMI [Meeting Abstract]
Young, B; Roper, H; Mourad, M; Olivares de Perez, AZ; Perez-Perez, GI; Pei, ZH; Blaser, MJ; Francois, F
ISI:000249397800125
ISSN: 0002-9270
CID: 74153
Radiographic determination of tissue thickness in paraffin blocks: application to the construction of tissue microarrays
Kong, Xiangtian; Zhao, Yan; Ksionsk, Marti; Zhou, Meisheng; Walden, Paul; Bosland, Maarten; Pei, Zhiheng; Lee, Peng; Melamed, Jonathan
The determination of tissue thickness in paraffin blocks in the histology laboratory has been largely based on visual estimates. More accurate methods are required for the construction of tissue microarrays (TMAs) to assure a greater yield of cores in sections through the TMA block. We describe an accurate radiographic method to determine tissue thickness in donor paraffin blocks and have validated its application to TMA construction. Individual radiographic analysis was performed on paraffin donor blocks used for the construction of TMAs for determination of donor block tissue thickness. Consecutive numbered slide sections through the TMA block were then examined for the presence or loss of cores in the 150th TMA slide (from the final third of the TMA block) and correlated with the thickness of the individual donor blocks determined radiographically. At the 150th TMA slide, 202 of 1340 cores (15.1%) were depleted. Radiographic measurement showed a greater thickness of the donor paraffin block tissue (2.02 mm) corresponding to the retained cores as compared with the donor tissue (1.54 mm) of the depleted cores (P < 0.001). With progressive slide sections through a TMA block, the retention of tissue cores shows a significant correlation with donor block tissue thickness. Radiographic determination of tissue thickness in donor paraffin blocks can be used in TMA construction. Prior knowledge of tissue thickness in TMA construction can prompt compensatory steps that can enhance the yield of valuable samples and assure sufficient numbers of adequate cores for statistical analysis in biomarker evaluations
PMID: 17536317
ISSN: 1541-2016
CID: 73238
Molecular analysis of human forearm superficial skin bacterial biota
Gao, Zhan; Tseng, Chi-hong; Pei, Zhiheng; Blaser, Martin J
The microbial ecology of human skin is complex, but little is known about its species composition. We examined the diversity of the skin biota from the superficial volar left and right forearms in six healthy subjects using broad-range small subunit rRNA genes (16S rDNA) PCR-based sequencing of randomly selected clones. For the initial 1,221 clones analyzed, 182 species-level operational taxonomic units (SLOTUs) belonging to eight phyla were identified, estimated as 74.0% [95% confidence interval (C.I.), approximately 64.8-77.9%] of the SLOTUs in this ecosystem; 48.0 +/- 12.2 SLOTUs were found in each subject. Three phyla (Actinobacteria, Firmicutes, and Proteobacteria) accounted for 94.6% of the clones. Most (85.3%) of the bacterial sequences corresponded to known and cultivated species, but 98 (8.0%) clones, comprising 30 phylotypes, had <97% similarity to prior database sequences. Only 6 (6.6%) of the 91 genera and 4 (2.2%) of the 182 SLOTUs, respectively, were found in all six subjects. Analysis of 817 clones obtained 8-10 months later from four subjects showed additional phyla (numbering 2), genera (numbering 28), and SLOTUs (numbering 65). Only four (3.4%) of the 119 genera (Propionibacteria, Corynebacteria, Staphylococcus, and Streptococcus) were observed in each subject tested twice, but these genera represented 54.4% of all clones. These results show that the bacterial biota in normal superficial skin is highly diverse, with few well conserved and well represented genera, but otherwise low-level interpersonal consensus
PMCID:1815283
PMID: 17293459
ISSN: 0027-8424
CID: 71419
Bacteria, inflammation, and colon cancer [Editorial]
Yang, Liying; Pei, Zhiheng
Our relationship with the colonic bacterial flora has long been viewed as benign, but recent studies suggest that this symbiosis has risks as well as benefits. This relationship requires that the host not only provide a supportive environment for the symbiotic bacteria, but also actively maintain intact mechanisms for properly managing the physiologic stresses that are closely associated with the symbiont's essential survival functions. Failure to do so breaches the host-symbiont contract, and can result in serious effects on the health of the host. Recent investigations that employ several knockout mouse models reveal the consequences of genetic deficiency in the host regarding these mechanisms, and the latent, pro-inflammatory, tumorigenic nature of normal bacterial flora. Further study of the interactions between normal bacterial flora and hosts could shed light on the etiologies and pathogenesis of inflammatory diseases and related cancers, with implications for human health
PMCID:4087425
PMID: 17106919
ISSN: 1007-9327
CID: 79201
Myxoid lipoadenoma of parathyroid gland: a case report and literature review [Case Report]
Fischer, Ingeborg; Wieczorek, Rosemary; Sidhu, Gurdip S; Pei, Zhiheng; West, Brian; Lee, Peng
Myxoid lipoadenoma of the parathyroid gland is a rare variant of parathyroid adenoma. We present the case of a 40-year-old man with asymptomatic hypercalcemia who underwent surgical removal of a parathyroid adenoma. Histologically, the tumor consisted of monomorphous round-to-oval chief cells arranged in several architectural patterns including solid sheet-like, trabecular, and follicular. The tumor stroma was prominently myxoid with interspersed mature adipose tissue. Immunohistochemistry confirmed expression of thyroid transcription factor and parathyroid hormone by all tumor cells and a low proliferation rate with a Ki-67 labeling index of at most 5%. Although the lesion exhibited characteristics that have been previously associated with 'atypical parathyroid adenoma,' such as dense fibrous bands within the tumor and a trabecular growth pattern, there was no further evidence, neither histologically nor clinically, for malignant behavior of the tumor
PMID: 16979523
ISSN: 1092-9134
CID: 68682
Bacterium-macrophage interaction in gastroesophageal reflux disease [Meeting Abstract]
Lu, X; Yang, L; Pei, Z
ISI:000234094500511
ISSN: 0893-3952
CID: 61436