William Benedict - Academia.edu (original) (raw)
Papers by William Benedict
Cancer research, 1997
Altered patterns of p53 and pRB expression have been reported to be frequent events and to have p... more Altered patterns of p53 and pRB expression have been reported to be frequent events and to have prognostic significance in bladder cancer. To assess the potential adverse consequences of having altered patterns of both p53 and pRB proteins in patients with bladder neoplasms compared with having one or neither abnormality, we have studied a cohort of superficial transitional cell carcinomas of the urinary bladder by immunohistochemical analysis. The present study included 59 well-characterized superficial transitional cell carcinomas (Ta, n = 28; T1, n = 31) for which clinicopathological variables were available. Nuclear overexpression of p53 was identified in 22 cases (37%). A statistically significant association was observed between the p53-positive phenotype and disease progression (P < 0.001), as well as reduced survival (P < 0.001). Undetectable levels of pRB were observed in 11 cases (19%). Patients with a pRB-negative phenotype had a more frequent disease progression (P...
Cancer research, Jan 15, 1996
The preclinical studies presented here demonstrate that treatment of human non-small cell lung ca... more The preclinical studies presented here demonstrate that treatment of human non-small cell lung carcinoma and bladder carcinoma cells by a recombinant adenovirus vector, AdCMVpRB94, expressing the N-terminal truncated retinoblastoma (RB) protein (pRB94) completely suppressed the tumorigenicity of the treated tumor cells in nude mice. Furthermore, gene therapy of established human RB- and RB+ bladder xenograft cancers in nude mice by AdCMVpRB94 resulted in regression of the treated tumors. Of note, although both the full-length and the truncated forms of the RB protein, when overexpressed in tumor cells via replication-deficient adenovirus vectors, were capable of suppression of tumor growth, the pRB94 was evidently more potent than the full-length RB protein.
Cancer research, 1994
The presence of retinoblastoma (RB) protein was evaluated by immunohistochemical staining and cor... more The presence of retinoblastoma (RB) protein was evaluated by immunohistochemical staining and correlated with loss of heterozygosity (LOH) at the RB locus in 52 primary epithelial ovarian carcinomas. Forty-eight tumors were informative at the RB locus by molecular genetic analysis. Twenty-five tumors (52%) showed loss of heterozygosity at the RB locus. RB protein expression was found in 23 of these tumors. The remaining two tumors were negative for RB protein product by immunohistochemical staining. All 23 tumors showing no LOH at the RB locus had a normal RB protein pattern. All but three tumors revealed either no LOH with any marker or, if LOH was found for one chromosome 13 marker, all other informative markers also showed LOH. The three recombinant tumors included two which retained alleles at one or more loci distal and one which retained alleles proximal to the RB locus. LOH at the RB locus was significantly more common in invasive high-grade (grades 3 and 4) tumors as compare...
Cancer research, 1994
We examined the frequencies of loss of heterozygosity on chromosome 13 in 77 primary ovarian epit... more We examined the frequencies of loss of heterozygosity on chromosome 13 in 77 primary ovarian epithelial tumors subdivided into cystadenomas, tumors of low malignant potential, low grade carcinomas, and high grade carcinomas. Such losses were found in approximately 50% of high grade carcinomas but were not detected in any of the other tumor subtypes (P < 0.0001), suggesting a strong association between these abnormalities and the high grade carcinoma phenotype. The tumors were also examined for abnormalities in expression of the retinoblastoma susceptibility gene (RB). This was assessed by immunohistochemical staining of archival tumor sections with a polyclonal antibody directed against both the phosphorylated and the underphosphorylated forms of the RB protein. Most of the tumors, including those with allelic deletions on chromosome 13, showed normal RB nuclear protein staining patterns. We conclude that loss of RB expression is not a frequent event in primary ovarian carcinomas...
Cell growth & differentiation : the molecular biology journal of the American Association for Cancer Research, 1990
The origins of the initial mutations in sporadic retinoblastoma were explored using polymorphic m... more The origins of the initial mutations in sporadic retinoblastoma were explored using polymorphic markers from chromosome 13q. The paternal chromosome was maintained in 3 of 3 informative bilateral tumors which had undergone reduction to homozygosity for regions of this chromosome. The paternal chromosome was maintained in 7 of 8 informative unilateral tumors which likewise demonstrated a reduction of homozygosity. These data are in contrast to previously published studies of chromosome retention in unilateral retinoblastoma [Dryja, T. P., Mukai, S., Petersen, R., Rapaport, J. M., Walton, D., and Yandel, D. W. Nature (Lond.), 339: 556-558, 1989; Zhu, Z., Dunn, J. M., Phillips, R. A., Goddard, A. D., Paton, K. E., Becker, A., and Gallie, B. L. Nature (Lond.), 340: 312-313, 1989] and provide the first evidence that genomic imprinting may play a role in this disease.
Cancer research, Jan 15, 1991
It has been reported that replacement of a functional retinoblastoma (RB) gene in RB defective WE... more It has been reported that replacement of a functional retinoblastoma (RB) gene in RB defective WERI-27 retinoblastoma cells results in complete loss of their tumorigenic potential in nude mice following s.c. injection. We have repeated the identical studies and found that although tumors did not develop s.c., the RB reconstituted cells, either soon after RB virus infection or after long term cultivation, consistently produced tumors when injected intraocularly. These tumor cells, when reestablished in culture, were found to retain a normal RB protein as determined by direct Western blotting and immunocytochemical staining. The tumors, however, occurred with a longer average latency period and with less frequency compared to those produced by the parental RB defective cells. Our results suggest that reintroduction of the RB gene into WERI-27 cells reduces but does not completely suppress their tumorigenic potential. Since retinoblastoma is an eye tumor it also provides further docume...
Cancer research, Jan 15, 2003
Retinoblastoma (RB)94, which lacks the NH(2)-terminal 112 amino acid residues of the full-length ... more Retinoblastoma (RB)94, which lacks the NH(2)-terminal 112 amino acid residues of the full-length RB protein (RB110), is a more potent tumor and growth suppressor than RB110. In this study, Ad-RB94, but not Ad-RB110, produced marked growth inhibition, cytotoxicity, caspase-dependent apoptosis, and G(2)-M block in the human RB-negative, telomerase-positive bladder cancer cell line UM-UC14. This effect was completely inhibited by pretreatment with caspase inhibitors (P < 0.0001). Similar results were seen in RB-positive and other RB-negative bladder cancer cell lines. Ad-RB94 produced rapid telomere length shortening and loss of telomere signal, which was associated with polyploidy and chromosomal aberrations (P < 0.001). Ad-RB94, however, showed no cytotoxicity to telomerase-negative human normal urothelium cells but was highly cytotoxic to telomerase-positive human E6 and E7 immortalized urothelial cells (P < 0.0001). In addition, telomerase-negative cells, which maintain th...
Human pathology, 1999
Cyclin D1, p16, and Rb genes play a critical role in the regulation of the G1-S transition of the... more Cyclin D1, p16, and Rb genes play a critical role in the regulation of the G1-S transition of the cell cycle and are frequently altered in several neoplastic entities. Analysis of the protein products of these genes by molecular and immunohistochemical methods provides information on their functional status and allows for the phenotypic evaluation of tumor cells. We performed Western blotting and immunohistochemical analysis on tissues from 35 primary oral and laryngeal squamous carcinoma specimens with previous molecular analysis of the p16 gene and correlated the results with relevant clinicopathologic factors. Our study shows significant concordance between Western blotting and immunostaining results for cyclin D1 (P = .01), p16 proteins (P = .01), and Rb (P = .04). Heterogeneous staining of tumor cells and the positivity of non-neoplastic host elements for Rb by immunohistochemistry contributed to the discrepancy noted in some tumors by Western blotting. Significant reciprocal r...
Cancer research, 1984
The tumorigenic capacity of hybrids formed by fusion of the highly tumorigenic HT1080 human fibro... more The tumorigenic capacity of hybrids formed by fusion of the highly tumorigenic HT1080 human fibrosarcoma cell line with nontumorigenic normal fibroblasts was examined. The HT1080 also contains an activated N-ras oncogene. Near-tetraploid hybrids which contained an approximately complete chromosomal complement from both parental cells were nontumorigenic when 1 X 10(7) cells were injected s.c. into athymic (nude) mice, whereas the parental HT1080 cells produced tumors in 100% of the animals with no latency period following injection of 2 X 10(6) cells. Tumorigenic variants were obtained from these hybrids which had lost only a few chromosomes compared to cells from the nontumorigenic mass cultures. In addition, several near-hexaploid hybrids were obtained which contained approximately a double chromosomal complement from the HT1080 parental line and a single chromosomal complement from the normal fibroblasts. All of these near-hexaploid hybrids produce tumors in 100% of nude mice wit...
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1994
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1994
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1985
Replicative cultures of human pleural mesothelial cells were established from noncancerous adult ... more Replicative cultures of human pleural mesothelial cells were established from noncancerous adult donors. The cells exhibited normal mesothelial cell characteristics including keratin, hyaluronic acid mucin, and long branched microvilli, and they retained the normal human karyotype until senescence. The mesothelial cells were 10 and 100 times more sensitive to the cytotoxic effects of asbestos fibers than normal human bronchial epithelial or fibroblastic cells, respectively. In addition, cultures of mesothelial cells that survived two cytotoxic exposures of amosite fibers were aneuploid with consistent specific chromosomal losses indicative of clonal origin. These aneuploid cells exhibit both altered growth control properties and a population doubling potential of greater than 50 divisions beyond the culture life span (30 doublings) of the control cells.
New England Journal of Medicine, 1994
The origin and molecular pathogenesis of parathyroid carcinoma are unknown. This life-threatening... more The origin and molecular pathogenesis of parathyroid carcinoma are unknown. This life-threatening cause of primary hyperparathyroidism cannot be reliably distinguished from its benign counterpart on the basis of histopathological features alone. Because the PRAD1, or cyclin D1, gene, a cell-cycle regulator, has been implicated in a subgroup of benign parathyroid tumors, we examined the possibility that another cell-cycle regulator with possible functional links to PRAD1, the retinoblastoma tumor-suppressor gene (RB), might be involved in the molecular pathogenesis of parathyroid carcinoma. Parathyroid carcinomas from 9 patients and adenomas from 21 were studied for evidence of tumor-specific loss of RB gene DNA (allelic loss) by analysis of four DNA polymorphisms and for evidence of altered expression oF RB protein by immunohistochemical staining. All of 11 specimens from 5 patients with parathyroid carcinoma and informative DNA patterns and 1 of 19 specimens from 19 patients with parathyroid adenoma and informative DNA patterns lacked an RB allele. Fourteen of 16 specimens (88 percent) from the nine patients with carcinoma had abnormal expression of RB protein (a complete or predominant absence of nuclear staining for the protein). None of the 19 adenomas, including the tumor with loss of an RB allele, had unequivocally abnormal staining for RB protein. Inactivation of the RB gene is common in parathyroid carcinoma and is likely to be an important contributor to its molecular pathogenesis. The presence of such inactivation may help to distinguish benign from malignant parathyroid disease and may have useful diagnostic, prognostic, and therapeutic implications.
The Journal of Urology, 2003
The Journal of Urology, 1995
We investigate the roles and possible interactions of the retinoblastoma, transforming growth fac... more We investigate the roles and possible interactions of the retinoblastoma, transforming growth factor-beta 1 and c-myc genes in bladder cancer. The expression of these 3 genes was examined in 38 biopsy specimens of human bladder cancer by immunohistochemical analysis or Northern blotting. Loss of the retinoblastoma protein expression was most significantly correlated with high grade cancer. Over expression of c-myc or expression of transforming growth factor-beta 1 was less associated with tumor grade or stage, although c-myc over expression defined stage Ta against other stage tumors, since no stage Ta lesions had increased c-myc expression. Finally, loss of retinoblastoma gene function did not correlate with either c-myc or transforming growth factor-beta 1 expression. These results further support that retinoblastoma gene inactivation is an important factor in the progression of bladder cancer, and suggest that transforming growth factor-beta 1 and c-myc are not regulators or are not regulated by retinoblastoma gene expression.
The Journal of Urology, 1998
The Journal of Urology, 1995
The Journal of Pathology, 1996
The retinoblastoma (RB) gene, which encodes the nuclear RB protein (pRB), is believed to be invol... more The retinoblastoma (RB) gene, which encodes the nuclear RB protein (pRB), is believed to be involved in cell cycle control and cell differentiation. Studies have demonstrated that loss of RB function may play a role in tumour formation and progression of a variety of human tumours, such as bladder, lung, breast, and prostate cancers. The immunohistochemical detection of pRB expression in formalin-paraffin sections of human cancer has potential advantages of convenience, economy, and compatibility with routine surgical pathology practice. In practice, however, results using pRB antibodies on routinely processed, paraffin-embedded tissue have been inconsistent. In this study, the antigen retrieval (AR) method has been applied to the immunohistochemical detection of pRB in paraffin-embedded tissues and a 'test battery' approach has been developed to identify the principal variables that result in the optimal AR protocol. This approach includes the use of buffered solutions at pH 1, 6, and 10 with three different heating conditions (temperatures 120 degrees C, 100 degrees C, and 90 degrees C). In the example described here with antibody RB-WL-1, the low pH solution with the microwave heating at 100 degrees C proved most effective. Both fresh and routinely processed formalin-paraffin tissues of normal and bladder carcinoma were used for a comparison of the pRB immunostaining. The AR method was evaluated by comparing the immunohistochemical staining result on routinely processed formalin-paraffin sections with frozen sections of the same tumour. A consistent intensity of immunohistochemical staining for pRB was achieved using the identified optimal AR protocol on formalin-paraffin sections. All slides showed positive staining of pRB in normal mesenchymal and epithelial tissues. The pattern of pRB localization and intensity of staining was similar to that obtained in frozen sections, though the intensity obtained by AR treatment on paraffin sections was slightly to moderately stronger than that obtained in frozen sections. Once the protocol was identified, it was tested using routinely processed paraffin tissue sections of 245 cases of bladder carcinoma, with consistent pRB immunostaining results. The protocol described is simple to perform and gives reproducible results for evaluation of pRB expression by immunohistochemistry.
Journal of Neuropathology and Experimental Neurology, 1995
The previous demonstration of rod-opsin and S-antigen (S-Ag), a protein which arrests visual phot... more The previous demonstration of rod-opsin and S-antigen (S-Ag), a protein which arrests visual phototransduction, in retinoblastomas and in a subgroup of medulloblastomas has suggested a relationship between these tumors. We examined 17 medulloblastomas for the presence of a retinoblastoma-like phenotype. Overall 41% of the tumors were immunoreactive for S-Ag. Two tumors with well-differentiated Flexner-Wintersteiner rosettes were also immunoreactive for S-Ag, but not for epithelial membrane antigen (EMA). In contrast, most ependymal rosettes in two ependymomas stained positive for EMA along the luminal surface, consistent with a previous study, and were negative for S-Ag. Because calcification in areas of necrosis is a near constant finding in retinoblastomas, the medulloblastomas were evaluated for the presence of calcification, using Von Kossa staining. Forty-one percent showed calcification in areas of necrosis and 29% were positive for both calcification and S-Ag immunoreactivity. There was a statistically significant concordance between calcification and S-Ag immunoreactivity in the medulloblastomas (p < 0.05). Despite similar phenotypic features, a shared mechanism of tumori-genesis for retinoblastomas and the subgroup of medulloblastomas with photoreceptor differentiation could not be identified since all 17 medulloblastomas were found to express functional Rb protein, as indicated by positive nuclear immunoreactivity.
Cancer research, 1997
Altered patterns of p53 and pRB expression have been reported to be frequent events and to have p... more Altered patterns of p53 and pRB expression have been reported to be frequent events and to have prognostic significance in bladder cancer. To assess the potential adverse consequences of having altered patterns of both p53 and pRB proteins in patients with bladder neoplasms compared with having one or neither abnormality, we have studied a cohort of superficial transitional cell carcinomas of the urinary bladder by immunohistochemical analysis. The present study included 59 well-characterized superficial transitional cell carcinomas (Ta, n = 28; T1, n = 31) for which clinicopathological variables were available. Nuclear overexpression of p53 was identified in 22 cases (37%). A statistically significant association was observed between the p53-positive phenotype and disease progression (P < 0.001), as well as reduced survival (P < 0.001). Undetectable levels of pRB were observed in 11 cases (19%). Patients with a pRB-negative phenotype had a more frequent disease progression (P...
Cancer research, Jan 15, 1996
The preclinical studies presented here demonstrate that treatment of human non-small cell lung ca... more The preclinical studies presented here demonstrate that treatment of human non-small cell lung carcinoma and bladder carcinoma cells by a recombinant adenovirus vector, AdCMVpRB94, expressing the N-terminal truncated retinoblastoma (RB) protein (pRB94) completely suppressed the tumorigenicity of the treated tumor cells in nude mice. Furthermore, gene therapy of established human RB- and RB+ bladder xenograft cancers in nude mice by AdCMVpRB94 resulted in regression of the treated tumors. Of note, although both the full-length and the truncated forms of the RB protein, when overexpressed in tumor cells via replication-deficient adenovirus vectors, were capable of suppression of tumor growth, the pRB94 was evidently more potent than the full-length RB protein.
Cancer research, 1994
The presence of retinoblastoma (RB) protein was evaluated by immunohistochemical staining and cor... more The presence of retinoblastoma (RB) protein was evaluated by immunohistochemical staining and correlated with loss of heterozygosity (LOH) at the RB locus in 52 primary epithelial ovarian carcinomas. Forty-eight tumors were informative at the RB locus by molecular genetic analysis. Twenty-five tumors (52%) showed loss of heterozygosity at the RB locus. RB protein expression was found in 23 of these tumors. The remaining two tumors were negative for RB protein product by immunohistochemical staining. All 23 tumors showing no LOH at the RB locus had a normal RB protein pattern. All but three tumors revealed either no LOH with any marker or, if LOH was found for one chromosome 13 marker, all other informative markers also showed LOH. The three recombinant tumors included two which retained alleles at one or more loci distal and one which retained alleles proximal to the RB locus. LOH at the RB locus was significantly more common in invasive high-grade (grades 3 and 4) tumors as compare...
Cancer research, 1994
We examined the frequencies of loss of heterozygosity on chromosome 13 in 77 primary ovarian epit... more We examined the frequencies of loss of heterozygosity on chromosome 13 in 77 primary ovarian epithelial tumors subdivided into cystadenomas, tumors of low malignant potential, low grade carcinomas, and high grade carcinomas. Such losses were found in approximately 50% of high grade carcinomas but were not detected in any of the other tumor subtypes (P < 0.0001), suggesting a strong association between these abnormalities and the high grade carcinoma phenotype. The tumors were also examined for abnormalities in expression of the retinoblastoma susceptibility gene (RB). This was assessed by immunohistochemical staining of archival tumor sections with a polyclonal antibody directed against both the phosphorylated and the underphosphorylated forms of the RB protein. Most of the tumors, including those with allelic deletions on chromosome 13, showed normal RB nuclear protein staining patterns. We conclude that loss of RB expression is not a frequent event in primary ovarian carcinomas...
Cell growth & differentiation : the molecular biology journal of the American Association for Cancer Research, 1990
The origins of the initial mutations in sporadic retinoblastoma were explored using polymorphic m... more The origins of the initial mutations in sporadic retinoblastoma were explored using polymorphic markers from chromosome 13q. The paternal chromosome was maintained in 3 of 3 informative bilateral tumors which had undergone reduction to homozygosity for regions of this chromosome. The paternal chromosome was maintained in 7 of 8 informative unilateral tumors which likewise demonstrated a reduction of homozygosity. These data are in contrast to previously published studies of chromosome retention in unilateral retinoblastoma [Dryja, T. P., Mukai, S., Petersen, R., Rapaport, J. M., Walton, D., and Yandel, D. W. Nature (Lond.), 339: 556-558, 1989; Zhu, Z., Dunn, J. M., Phillips, R. A., Goddard, A. D., Paton, K. E., Becker, A., and Gallie, B. L. Nature (Lond.), 340: 312-313, 1989] and provide the first evidence that genomic imprinting may play a role in this disease.
Cancer research, Jan 15, 1991
It has been reported that replacement of a functional retinoblastoma (RB) gene in RB defective WE... more It has been reported that replacement of a functional retinoblastoma (RB) gene in RB defective WERI-27 retinoblastoma cells results in complete loss of their tumorigenic potential in nude mice following s.c. injection. We have repeated the identical studies and found that although tumors did not develop s.c., the RB reconstituted cells, either soon after RB virus infection or after long term cultivation, consistently produced tumors when injected intraocularly. These tumor cells, when reestablished in culture, were found to retain a normal RB protein as determined by direct Western blotting and immunocytochemical staining. The tumors, however, occurred with a longer average latency period and with less frequency compared to those produced by the parental RB defective cells. Our results suggest that reintroduction of the RB gene into WERI-27 cells reduces but does not completely suppress their tumorigenic potential. Since retinoblastoma is an eye tumor it also provides further docume...
Cancer research, Jan 15, 2003
Retinoblastoma (RB)94, which lacks the NH(2)-terminal 112 amino acid residues of the full-length ... more Retinoblastoma (RB)94, which lacks the NH(2)-terminal 112 amino acid residues of the full-length RB protein (RB110), is a more potent tumor and growth suppressor than RB110. In this study, Ad-RB94, but not Ad-RB110, produced marked growth inhibition, cytotoxicity, caspase-dependent apoptosis, and G(2)-M block in the human RB-negative, telomerase-positive bladder cancer cell line UM-UC14. This effect was completely inhibited by pretreatment with caspase inhibitors (P < 0.0001). Similar results were seen in RB-positive and other RB-negative bladder cancer cell lines. Ad-RB94 produced rapid telomere length shortening and loss of telomere signal, which was associated with polyploidy and chromosomal aberrations (P < 0.001). Ad-RB94, however, showed no cytotoxicity to telomerase-negative human normal urothelium cells but was highly cytotoxic to telomerase-positive human E6 and E7 immortalized urothelial cells (P < 0.0001). In addition, telomerase-negative cells, which maintain th...
Human pathology, 1999
Cyclin D1, p16, and Rb genes play a critical role in the regulation of the G1-S transition of the... more Cyclin D1, p16, and Rb genes play a critical role in the regulation of the G1-S transition of the cell cycle and are frequently altered in several neoplastic entities. Analysis of the protein products of these genes by molecular and immunohistochemical methods provides information on their functional status and allows for the phenotypic evaluation of tumor cells. We performed Western blotting and immunohistochemical analysis on tissues from 35 primary oral and laryngeal squamous carcinoma specimens with previous molecular analysis of the p16 gene and correlated the results with relevant clinicopathologic factors. Our study shows significant concordance between Western blotting and immunostaining results for cyclin D1 (P = .01), p16 proteins (P = .01), and Rb (P = .04). Heterogeneous staining of tumor cells and the positivity of non-neoplastic host elements for Rb by immunohistochemistry contributed to the discrepancy noted in some tumors by Western blotting. Significant reciprocal r...
Cancer research, 1984
The tumorigenic capacity of hybrids formed by fusion of the highly tumorigenic HT1080 human fibro... more The tumorigenic capacity of hybrids formed by fusion of the highly tumorigenic HT1080 human fibrosarcoma cell line with nontumorigenic normal fibroblasts was examined. The HT1080 also contains an activated N-ras oncogene. Near-tetraploid hybrids which contained an approximately complete chromosomal complement from both parental cells were nontumorigenic when 1 X 10(7) cells were injected s.c. into athymic (nude) mice, whereas the parental HT1080 cells produced tumors in 100% of the animals with no latency period following injection of 2 X 10(6) cells. Tumorigenic variants were obtained from these hybrids which had lost only a few chromosomes compared to cells from the nontumorigenic mass cultures. In addition, several near-hexaploid hybrids were obtained which contained approximately a double chromosomal complement from the HT1080 parental line and a single chromosomal complement from the normal fibroblasts. All of these near-hexaploid hybrids produce tumors in 100% of nude mice wit...
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1994
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1994
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1985
Replicative cultures of human pleural mesothelial cells were established from noncancerous adult ... more Replicative cultures of human pleural mesothelial cells were established from noncancerous adult donors. The cells exhibited normal mesothelial cell characteristics including keratin, hyaluronic acid mucin, and long branched microvilli, and they retained the normal human karyotype until senescence. The mesothelial cells were 10 and 100 times more sensitive to the cytotoxic effects of asbestos fibers than normal human bronchial epithelial or fibroblastic cells, respectively. In addition, cultures of mesothelial cells that survived two cytotoxic exposures of amosite fibers were aneuploid with consistent specific chromosomal losses indicative of clonal origin. These aneuploid cells exhibit both altered growth control properties and a population doubling potential of greater than 50 divisions beyond the culture life span (30 doublings) of the control cells.
New England Journal of Medicine, 1994
The origin and molecular pathogenesis of parathyroid carcinoma are unknown. This life-threatening... more The origin and molecular pathogenesis of parathyroid carcinoma are unknown. This life-threatening cause of primary hyperparathyroidism cannot be reliably distinguished from its benign counterpart on the basis of histopathological features alone. Because the PRAD1, or cyclin D1, gene, a cell-cycle regulator, has been implicated in a subgroup of benign parathyroid tumors, we examined the possibility that another cell-cycle regulator with possible functional links to PRAD1, the retinoblastoma tumor-suppressor gene (RB), might be involved in the molecular pathogenesis of parathyroid carcinoma. Parathyroid carcinomas from 9 patients and adenomas from 21 were studied for evidence of tumor-specific loss of RB gene DNA (allelic loss) by analysis of four DNA polymorphisms and for evidence of altered expression oF RB protein by immunohistochemical staining. All of 11 specimens from 5 patients with parathyroid carcinoma and informative DNA patterns and 1 of 19 specimens from 19 patients with parathyroid adenoma and informative DNA patterns lacked an RB allele. Fourteen of 16 specimens (88 percent) from the nine patients with carcinoma had abnormal expression of RB protein (a complete or predominant absence of nuclear staining for the protein). None of the 19 adenomas, including the tumor with loss of an RB allele, had unequivocally abnormal staining for RB protein. Inactivation of the RB gene is common in parathyroid carcinoma and is likely to be an important contributor to its molecular pathogenesis. The presence of such inactivation may help to distinguish benign from malignant parathyroid disease and may have useful diagnostic, prognostic, and therapeutic implications.
The Journal of Urology, 2003
The Journal of Urology, 1995
We investigate the roles and possible interactions of the retinoblastoma, transforming growth fac... more We investigate the roles and possible interactions of the retinoblastoma, transforming growth factor-beta 1 and c-myc genes in bladder cancer. The expression of these 3 genes was examined in 38 biopsy specimens of human bladder cancer by immunohistochemical analysis or Northern blotting. Loss of the retinoblastoma protein expression was most significantly correlated with high grade cancer. Over expression of c-myc or expression of transforming growth factor-beta 1 was less associated with tumor grade or stage, although c-myc over expression defined stage Ta against other stage tumors, since no stage Ta lesions had increased c-myc expression. Finally, loss of retinoblastoma gene function did not correlate with either c-myc or transforming growth factor-beta 1 expression. These results further support that retinoblastoma gene inactivation is an important factor in the progression of bladder cancer, and suggest that transforming growth factor-beta 1 and c-myc are not regulators or are not regulated by retinoblastoma gene expression.
The Journal of Urology, 1998
The Journal of Urology, 1995
The Journal of Pathology, 1996
The retinoblastoma (RB) gene, which encodes the nuclear RB protein (pRB), is believed to be invol... more The retinoblastoma (RB) gene, which encodes the nuclear RB protein (pRB), is believed to be involved in cell cycle control and cell differentiation. Studies have demonstrated that loss of RB function may play a role in tumour formation and progression of a variety of human tumours, such as bladder, lung, breast, and prostate cancers. The immunohistochemical detection of pRB expression in formalin-paraffin sections of human cancer has potential advantages of convenience, economy, and compatibility with routine surgical pathology practice. In practice, however, results using pRB antibodies on routinely processed, paraffin-embedded tissue have been inconsistent. In this study, the antigen retrieval (AR) method has been applied to the immunohistochemical detection of pRB in paraffin-embedded tissues and a 'test battery' approach has been developed to identify the principal variables that result in the optimal AR protocol. This approach includes the use of buffered solutions at pH 1, 6, and 10 with three different heating conditions (temperatures 120 degrees C, 100 degrees C, and 90 degrees C). In the example described here with antibody RB-WL-1, the low pH solution with the microwave heating at 100 degrees C proved most effective. Both fresh and routinely processed formalin-paraffin tissues of normal and bladder carcinoma were used for a comparison of the pRB immunostaining. The AR method was evaluated by comparing the immunohistochemical staining result on routinely processed formalin-paraffin sections with frozen sections of the same tumour. A consistent intensity of immunohistochemical staining for pRB was achieved using the identified optimal AR protocol on formalin-paraffin sections. All slides showed positive staining of pRB in normal mesenchymal and epithelial tissues. The pattern of pRB localization and intensity of staining was similar to that obtained in frozen sections, though the intensity obtained by AR treatment on paraffin sections was slightly to moderately stronger than that obtained in frozen sections. Once the protocol was identified, it was tested using routinely processed paraffin tissue sections of 245 cases of bladder carcinoma, with consistent pRB immunostaining results. The protocol described is simple to perform and gives reproducible results for evaluation of pRB expression by immunohistochemistry.
Journal of Neuropathology and Experimental Neurology, 1995
The previous demonstration of rod-opsin and S-antigen (S-Ag), a protein which arrests visual phot... more The previous demonstration of rod-opsin and S-antigen (S-Ag), a protein which arrests visual phototransduction, in retinoblastomas and in a subgroup of medulloblastomas has suggested a relationship between these tumors. We examined 17 medulloblastomas for the presence of a retinoblastoma-like phenotype. Overall 41% of the tumors were immunoreactive for S-Ag. Two tumors with well-differentiated Flexner-Wintersteiner rosettes were also immunoreactive for S-Ag, but not for epithelial membrane antigen (EMA). In contrast, most ependymal rosettes in two ependymomas stained positive for EMA along the luminal surface, consistent with a previous study, and were negative for S-Ag. Because calcification in areas of necrosis is a near constant finding in retinoblastomas, the medulloblastomas were evaluated for the presence of calcification, using Von Kossa staining. Forty-one percent showed calcification in areas of necrosis and 29% were positive for both calcification and S-Ag immunoreactivity. There was a statistically significant concordance between calcification and S-Ag immunoreactivity in the medulloblastomas (p < 0.05). Despite similar phenotypic features, a shared mechanism of tumori-genesis for retinoblastomas and the subgroup of medulloblastomas with photoreceptor differentiation could not be identified since all 17 medulloblastomas were found to express functional Rb protein, as indicated by positive nuclear immunoreactivity.