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Cervical Epithelial Cells (cervical + epithelial_cell)
Selected AbstractsApplication of flow cytometry for biomarker-based cervical cancer cells detectionDIAGNOSTIC CYTOPATHOLOGY, Issue 2 2008Jian Ling Ph.D. Abstract The Pap test used for cervical cancer screening is subjective, labor-intensive, and has relatively low sensitivity and specificity for the detection of underlying clinically significant lesions. The objective of this study is to develop a biomarker/flow cytometry-based approach for cervical cancer screening. Immunofluorescence technology to quantify cervical cell expression of two biomarkers p16INK4A and Mcm5 was developed and evaluated by both microcopy and flow cytometry. The capability of using biomarker/flow cytometry approach to detect rare-event dysplastic cells in a large background of benign epithelial and inflammatory cells was evaluated. The results indicate that flow cytometry could detect 0.01% dysplastic cells in a background of normal cervical epithelial cells with the combination of the two biomarkers. Thirty-two clinical specimens were used to test the biomarker/flow cytometry-based approach and the results were compared with the liquid-based cervical cytology. The experiment yielded 100% sensitivity and 93% specificity with reference to the liquid-based cervical cytology. This study indicates the promise of using multi-color fluorescence flow cytometry for biomarker-based cervical cancer screening. This molecular-based, potentially high-throughput and automated method is expected to provide an alternative/auxiliary means of cervical cancer screening. Diagn. Cytopathol. 2008;36:76,84. © 2008 Wiley-Liss, Inc. [source] Parity is associated with lower cervical E-cadherin expression in postmenopausal womenJOURNAL OF OBSTETRICS AND GYNAECOLOGY RESEARCH (ELECTRONIC), Issue 6 2008Vasileios Sioulas Abstract Aim:, Epithelial cadherin (E-cadherin), a transmembrane glycoprotein involved in calcium-dependent homophilic cell-cell adhesion, is expressed aberrantly during cervical carcinogenesis. E-cadherin expression and putatively implicated predictors in healthy women remain a rather under-investigated area. The objective of this study is to evaluate the possible associations between E-cadherin expression and reproductive/lifestyle factors in cervical epithelial cells from postmenopausal women. Methods:, A total of 105 healthy postmenopausal women (aged 45,68 years old) attending a university menopause clinic were enrolled in this cross-sectional study. Pap smears were derived and E-cadherin immunostaining was evaluated in squamous, glandular and squamous metaplastic cells, using a semi-quantitative method (rating scale: 0,3). Reproductive and lifestyle factors were obtained from patients' chart review. Results:, In squamous cells, women with a history of 0,1 deliveries presented with a higher score vs women with 2,4 deliveries (P = 0.003). Social drinkers and women drinking alcohol daily exhibited a higher E-cadherin immunostaining score in squamous cells vs non-drinkers (0.96 ± 0.72 vs 0.56 ± 0.65, P = 0.004). A higher dietary calcium intake was marginally correlated with a lower staining score in squamous cells (0.94 ± 0.78 for low, 0.71 ± 0.70 for average, 0.45 ± 0.52 for high consumption, P = 0.073). Conclusions:, E-cadherin expression seems to be associated with reproductive history and lifestyle habits in squamous cervical cells from healthy postmenopausal women. E-cadherin might participate in the molecular mechanisms underlying the role of parity as a risk factor for cervical cancer. [source] Anatomicohistological Characteristics of the Female Genital Organs of the White-lipped Peccary (Tayassu pecari) in the Peruvian AmazonANATOMIA, HISTOLOGIA, EMBRYOLOGIA, Issue 6 2009P. Mayor Summary This study examined the anatomical and histological characteristics of the genital organs of the female white-lipped peccary in the wild in different reproductive stages, collected by rural hunters in the North-eastern Peruvian Amazon. Mean ovulation rate was 2.12 ± 0.83 follicles and litter size was 1.78 ± 0.41 embryos or fetuses per pregnant female, resulting in a low rate of reproductive wastage, averaging 0.33 ± 0.66 (16.04%) oocytes or embryos per pregnancy. The ovulation rate and the anatomical performance of the uterus could limit the prolificacy of this species. Females in follicular phase showed follicular waves suggesting the synchronous growth of a cohort of follicles. Different uterine and vaginal epithelium features changed in accordance with the reproductive state of the female. Pregnant females and females in the luteal phase presented a significant proliferation of endometrial uterine glands, characterized by hyperplasia and branching of endometrial glands, and increase in the proportion of cervical epithelial cells with periodic acid-schiff (PAS)-positive granules compared with that in females in the follicular phase. Females in the follicular phase showed a more developed vaginal epithelium (in thickness and in layer composition) than females in the luteal phase and pregnant females. [source] R-Ras promotes tumor growth of cervical epithelial cellsCANCER, Issue 3 2003Héctor Rincón-Arano B.S. Abstract BACKGROUND R-Ras is 55% identical to H-Ras. However, these two oncogenes seem to have different tumor-transforming potential. R-Ras induced cell transformation in fibroblasts but not in other cell types. R-Ras also reportedly induces a more invasive phenotype in breast epithelial cells through integrin activation. The authors studied the mechanisms whereby R-Ras induces a malignant phenotype. METHODS Dominant negative (R-Ras43N) and constitutively active (R-Ras87L) mutants of R-Ras were stably transfected into human cervical epithelium C33A cells. Transfected cells were analyzed for adhesion, cell spreading, migration, and growth in culture and in nude mice. The activity of extracellular signal-regulated kinase (ERK) and phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (PI 3-K) also was determined by Western blot analysis and by in vitro kinase assays. RESULTS R-Ras87L-transfected cells, but not R-Ras43 N-transfected cells, had a higher growth rate in nude mice and in culture compared with control cells. None of the transfected C33A cells showed an increase in cell adhesion to fibronectin or collagen I, nor did they show an increment of ,1 integrin affinity. However, cells that expressed R-Ras87L, but not cells that expressed R-Ras 43N, presented a marked increase in cell spreading and migration through collagen-coated membranes. Increases in cell proliferation, spreading, and migration induced by R-Ras87L were inhibited by the PI 3-K inhibitor LY294002. In addition, PI 3-K activity, but not ERK activity, was increased only in cells that expressed R-Ras87L. CONCLUSIONS These data suggest that the oncogene R-Ras promotes tumor growth of cervical epithelial cells and increases their migration potential over collagen through a pathway that involves PI 3-K. Cancer 2003;97:575,85. © 2003 American Cancer Society. DOI 10.1002/cncr.11093 [source] A co-operative interaction between Neisseria gonorrhoeae and complement receptor 3 mediates infection of primary cervical epithelial cellsCELLULAR MICROBIOLOGY, Issue 9 2002Jennifer L. Edwards Summary Little is known about the pathogenesis of gonococcal infection within the lower female genital tract. We recently described the distribution of complement receptor 3 (CR3) on epithelia of the female genital tract. Our studies further indicate that CR3-mediated endocytosis serves as a primary mechanism by which N. gonorrhoeae elicits membrane ruffling and cellular invasion of primary, human, cervical epithelial cells. We have extended these studies to describe the nature of the gonococcus,CR3 interaction. Western Blot analysis demonstrated production of alternative pathway complement components by ecto- and endocervical cells which allows C3b deposition on gonococci and its rapid conversion to iC3b. Anti-iC3b and -factor I antibodies significantly inhibited adherence and invasion of primary cervical cells, suggesting that iC3b covalently bound to the gonococcus serves as a primary ligand for CR3 adherence. However, gonococcal porin and pili also bound to the I-domain of CR3 in a non-opsonic manner. Binding of porin and pili to CR3 were required for adherence to and invasion of cervical epithelia. Collectively, these data suggest that gonococcal adherence to CR3 occurs in a co-operative manner, which requires gonococcal iC3b-opsonization, porin and pilus. In conjunction, these molecules facilitate targeting to and successful infection of the cervical epithelium. [source] |