Infection with H. pylori is associated with an increased risk of gastric adenocarcinoma and may be a cofactor in the pathogenesis of this malignant condition.
Evidence implicating histidyl-tRNA synthetase (Jo-1) in the pathogenesis of the anti-synthetase syndrome includes established genetic associations linking the reproducible phenotype of muscle inflammation and interstitial lung disease with autoantibodies recognizing Jo-1. To better address the role of Jo-1-directed B and T cell responses in the context of different genetic backgrounds, we employed Jo-1 protein immunization of C57BL/6 and NOD congenic mice. Detailed analysis of early antibody responses following inoculation with human or murine Jo-1 demonstrates remarkable species-specifity, with limited cross recognition of Jo-1 from the opposite species. Complementing these results, immunization with purified peptides derived from murine Jo-1 generates B and T cells targeting species-specific epitopes contained within the amino terminal 120 amino acids of murine Jo-1. The eventual spreading of B cell epitopes that uniformly occurs 8 weeks post immunization with murine Jo-1 provides additional evidence of an immune response mediated by autoreactive, Jo-1-specific T cells. Corresponding to this self-reactivity, mice immunized with murine Jo-1 develop a striking combination of muscle and lung inflammation that replicates features of the human antisynthetase syndrome.
Direct and indirect evidence indicates that T cells are altered in alcoholics. The most commonly reported changes under direct examination have been consistent with an increased level of activation as reflected by shifts in the ratio of common leukocyte antigen isoforms expressed at the cell surface, by increases in the expression of class II antigen, or by alterations in the expression of various adhesion molecules. Functional evidence for T-cell abnormality includes loss of delayed hypersensitivity and a number of findings attributed to dysregulation of B cells by alcoholic T cells; these include the widely reported distrubances of immunoglobulin production in vivo and a range of abnormal responses when T and B cells are combined in vitro. Detailed flow cytometric examination of T cells from alcoholics with or without active liver disease reveals a significant loss of L-selectin CD8+ T cells, but not usually of CD4+ T cells. There is an inverse increase in the expression of CD11b on the CD8+ cells that have decreased L-selectin+ percentages. Both CD8+ and CD4+ T cells in alcoholics display a significant loss of the CD45RA isoform and a gain of cells exhibiting the CD45RO isoform. Other surface alterations include increased expression of CD57, a marker most commonly associated on T cells with conditions of chronic increased antigenic exposure. It is argued that these and other T-cell alterations in alcoholics are cytokine-driven in part and result in T-cell differentiation states that are functionally inappropriate.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
Glandular schwannoma is a rare variant of schwannoma characterized by the presence of glands in an otherwise typical schwannoma. We report a patient with benign glandular schwannoma occurring on the scalp, a site not previously reported. Histologically, a well-defined, encapsulated oval nodule was observed in the subcutaneous tissue. The nodule was composed of a spindle cell component and glandular structures. The spindle cell component stained positively for S-100 protein. All of the glandular epithelium stained with CAM 5.2 and epithelial membrane antigen but not with S-100 protein. The glandular epithelium was focally positive for carcinoembryonic antigen. The histogenesis of the glandular elements in these tumours is still debated. The variable size of the glandular structures in our case was evidence against an entrapped normal sweat gland origin. The glandular epithelium did not stain with S-100 protein at all, but stained with CAM 5.2, which did not support a direct metaplastic origin of the epithelial elements from the schwannian component. A few scattered CAM 5.2-positive cells and microglandular structures in our case may be the initial differentiating epithelial elements possibly derived from pluripotential neural crest cells.
The human lymphocyte fraction with the greatest fresh killing activity against K562 targets is phenotypically the CD3-CD19-CD56+ subset. There have been reports of reduced natural killer (NK) activity in human alcoholics, but overall consistency is lacking and phenotypic monitoring has been inadequate to allow reliable estimates of changes in the active cell fractions. We have evaluated a range of cell surface markers and fresh NK activity in controls and alcoholics, and now report abnormalities in both phenotype and function in some alcoholics, but a normal profile in others. Patients without evidence of active liver disease (AWLDs) tend to have normal fresh basal activities and phenotypic profiles. Patients with alcoholic liver disease (ALDs) have fewer Lin- lymphocytes that are CD56+. Three of 14 ALDs assayed in the present work had absent NK activity, whereas others were activated. In normal controls and in AWLDs, the presence of monocytes in the lytic assay consistently inhibits lysis; but, in some patients with ALD, the presence of monocytes is stimulatory to NK activity. In alcoholics as one group, there is a statistically significant relative increase in a novel Lin- subset of unknown function; this subset has a phenotype of Lin-CD56-CD45RO+.
The human lymphocyte fraction with the greatest fresh killing activity against K562 targets is phenotypically the CD3-CD19-CD56+ subset. There have been reports of reduced natural killer (NK) activity in human alcoholics, but overall consistency is lacking and phenotypic monitoring has been inadequate to allow reliable estimates of changes in the active cell fractions. We have evaluated a range of cell surface markers and fresh NK activity in controls and alcoholics, and now report abnormalities in both phenotype and function in some alcoholics, but a normal profile in others. Patients without evidence of active liver disease (AWLDs) tend to have normal fresh basal activities and phenotypic profiles. Patients with alcoholic liver disease (ALDs) have fewer Lin- lymphocytes that are CD56+. Three of 14 ALDs assayed in the present work had absent NK activity, whereas others were activated. In normal controls and in AWLDs, the presence of monocytes in the lytic assay consistently inhibits lysis; but, in some patients with ALD, the presence of monocytes is stimulatory to NK activity. In alcoholics as one group, there is a statistically significant relative increase in a novel Lin- subset of unknown function; this subset has a phenotype of Lin-CD56-CD45RO+.
Dermatomyofibroma is a rare benign cutaneous mesenchymal neoplasm of the fibroblasts and myofibroblasts. The majority of dermatomyofibromas present as red-brown discolored plaques or nodules, commonly located on the shoulder, upper arm, axilla, neck, and/or upper trunk. These lesions develop most frequently in young female patients at a mean of 28-years-of-age. Herein, a case of dermatomyofibroma is reported that developed in an infant. A 4-month-old boy presented with an ill-defined bluish firm plaque on the trunk that developed 1 month after birth. Histopathologically, there was proliferation of bland-looking spindle cells with fascicular arrangement in the dermis and subcutaneous tissue. Immunohistochemistry showed that most of the tumor cells expressed diffuse positivity for vimentin and smooth muscle actin, but were negative for S-100 protein, desmin, and CD34.
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