RESUMO
The authors report 2 cases of apocrine cystadenoma of the eyelid, 1 of which was studied with immunohistochemical and other special stains. While a previous report describes the tumor in a palpebro-orbital location, no other detailed descriptions of a purely eyelid location are present in the literature. Apocrine cystadenoma occupies an unusual portion of the spectrum of Moll gland tumors of the eyelid. It has no definitive clinical characteristics and may be diagnosed pathologically by hematoxylin-eosin-stained sections.
Assuntos
Glândulas Apócrinas/patologia , Cistadenoma/patologia , Neoplasias Palpebrais/patologia , Neoplasias das Glândulas Sudoríparas/patologia , Idoso , Feminino , Humanos , Masculino , Pessoa de Meia-IdadeRESUMO
Monoclonal antibody 12D11 (MAb 12D11) has been shown to bind histone H1 isolated from human placenta and other tissues but not histone H1 that has been digested with bacterial alkaline phosphatase. We show here that phosphorylation of phosphatase-treated histone H1 with cyclin dependent-kinase (CDK) restores binding by MAb 12D11. We conclude that MAb 12D11 selectively binds histone H1 that has been phosphorylated by CDKs, and we have investigated the use of MAb 12D11 as an immunohistochemical probe of CDK activity in situ. Previous immunofluorescence studies have revealed strong nuclear staining by MAb 12D11 in proliferating cultured cells and the absence of staining in terminally differentiated cells. Immunohistochemical staining of frozen and formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded sections of benign tissues with MAb 12D11 was nuclear and confined to recognized foci of cell proliferation. In lymphoid germinal centers, MAb 12D11 preferentially stained large lymphoid cells with a relative lack of staining in small cleaved cells, contrasting with a lack of cell size discrimination observed with the monoclonal antibody proliferation probe, MIB-1. Tumor tissues displayed strong albeit heterogeneous staining of malignant cells by MAb 12D11, with little or no staining observed in surrounding nonneoplastic stromal cells. Differential staining by MAb 12D11 of invasive and in situ carcinoma suggest applications in prognostication. MAb 12D11 may also be useful in identification of tumors more likely to respond to therapeutic CDK inhibitors.