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Fibrillin expression and localization in various types of carcinomas of the thyroid gland
Author(s) -
Sofia TseleniBalafouta,
Hariklia Gakiopoulou,
Galinos Fanourakis,
Gerassimos E. Voutsinas,
Helen Litsiou,
Ηλίας Σωζόπουλος,
Dimitrios Balafoutas,
Efstratios Patsouris
Publication year - 2006
Publication title -
modern pathology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.596
H-Index - 153
eISSN - 1530-0285
pISSN - 0893-3952
DOI - 10.1038/modpathol.3800578
Subject(s) - fibrillin , pathology , extracellular matrix , thyroid , stroma , thyroid carcinoma , stromal cell , cell culture , cell , carcinoma , biology , immunohistochemistry , cancer research , medicine , microbiology and biotechnology , endocrinology , genetics
Fibrillin is an extracellular matrix (ECM) glycoprotein, a main component of microfibrills, suggested to support cell attachment and to impact cell differentiation and migration. The aim of this study was to investigate fibrillin-1 expression in thyroid carcinomas at mRNA and protein level, since ECM proteins are suggested to be of great importance for the metastatic potential of carcinomas. RNA was extracted from 13 thyroid carcinoma cell lines and RT-PCR analysis with gene-specific primers revealed fibrillin-1 mRNA expression in all cell lines, with highest expression in the follicular carcinoma cell line WRO and lowest expression in the two anaplastic cell lines (APO, FRO). Furthermore, we investigated fibrillin-1 expression by immumohistochemistry in a commercially available tissue microarray including 50 thyroid carcinomas as well as in archival tissue from 33 thyroid carcinomas. Fibrillin-1 demonstrated a cytoplasmic location in the neoplastic cells of almost all carcinomas apart from the follicular ones. The most intense staining was observed in papillary carcinomas with some evidence of a slight increased intensity in advanced stages. Our data indicate that fibrillin-1 is strongly expressed by the neoplastic cells of thyroid carcinomas in different degree in the various histologic types and might be implicated in cell-stroma interaction in terms of signaling, attachment and migration.

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