Sessile Serrated Polyps Without Dysplasia Thrives With Asymmetric Relocation of Cell Proliferation-domains

Anticancer Research
Carlos A Rubio, Peter T Schmidt

Abstract

Sessile serrated polyps without dysplasia (SSPND) are characterized by crypts with serrated epithelium, albeit with irregular, corrupted shapes (CCS). Cell proliferation was explored in the CCS from 60 SSPND and in the crypts from 12 normal colons. Sections were immuno-stained with the Ki-67 proliferation-cell (PC) marker, and with the p53 tumour-suppressor gene. Three predominant PC-phenotypes were found in the CCS from the 60 SSPND: 44 (73.3%) exhibited ectopic, asymmetric, randomly distributed PC-clusters, 12 (20.0%), continuous PC in one or in both slopes of the crypts, and in the remaining 4 (6.7%), single, randomly distributed PC were recorded. In contrast, the scrutiny of more than 200,000 normal colon crypts (controls) showed symmetrically aligned PC, restricted to the lower third of the crypts. p53-up-regulation in CCS was recorded in 11(18.3%) of the 60 NDSSP, but in none of the normal crypts in the 12 controls. The non-dysplastic epithelium that lines CCS in SSPND coexists with an asymmetric relocation of the PC-domains. In addition, the CCS in nearly one-fifth of the SSPND exhibited p53-up-regulated cells. Taken together, the non-dysplastic CCS epithelium in SSPND thrives with somatic mutations. The accretion of put...Continue Reading

Citations

Oct 14, 2020·Journal of Clinical Pathology·Carlos A Rubio, Peter T Schmidt

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