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Showing papers by "Kenji Okita published in 2003"


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is thought that SPIO-MRI is a promising imaging modality for diagnosing liver metastases in patients with colorectal carcinoma because of its relatively high sensitivity and extremely high specificity.
Abstract: Aim: To determine whether superparamagnetic iron oxide-enhanced magnetic resonance imaging (SPIO-MRI) could replace intravenous contrast-enhanced spiral CT (iv-CT) and spiral CT dur

31 citations


Journal Article
TL;DR: The results suggested that beta-catenin alteration might be a minor contributor to the development of gallbladder carcinomas through abnormal Wnt-wingless signalling, however, decreased membranous expression of beta-Catenin might be correlated to carcinoma progression through loss of cell adhesive function in E-cadherin- catenin fashion.
Abstract: To investigate the contribution of beta-catenin to the development of gallbladder carcinoma, genetic alteration in beta-catenin gene, ctnnb-1 and subcellular localization of beta-catenin protein were searched. Mutational analysis of exon 3 in ctnnb-1, which encodes the serine/threonine residues for GSK3beta phosphorylation sites, was performed for 21 gallbladder carcinomas affected with/without the pancreaticobiliary malunion, PBM, and 6 non-cancerous tissues affected with PBM. We also analyzed subcellular localization of beta-catenin protein in all cases immunohistochemically. Nucleotide sequencing analysis revealed that none of them carried mutations that altered amino acid residues in the potential GSK3beta phophorylation sites, but one nucleotide substitution was found. We also analyzed subcellular localization of beta-catenin protein in all cases immunohistochemically, and confirmed its accumulation in both the nucleus and cytoplasm in 10 out of 21 cancer tissues, while the non-cancerous tissues which were affected with PBM and histologically diagnosed as hyperplasia or dysplasia displayed intense membranous staining. A significant correlation between cytoplasmic or nuclear beta-catenin immunoreactivity and clinicopathological status of gallbladder carcinomas was found, especially in the poorer histological differentiation grade(p < 0.05). In conclusion our results suggested that beta-catenin alteration might be a minor contributor to the development of gallbladder carcinomas through abnormal Wnt-wingless signalling, however, decreased membranous expression of beta-catenin might be correlated to carcinoma progression through loss of cell adhesive function in E-cadherin-catenin fashion.

18 citations