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Glycocalyceal bodies and microvillous core rootlets: their value in tumor typing.
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1979
Year
GastroenterologyPathologyMicrovillous Core RootletsMicrovillous Filament CoresTumor BiologyCarcinomaOvarian CancerSurgical PathologyGastrointestinal Stromal TumorsCell SurfaceMolecular PathologyGlycocalyceal BodiesCancer ResearchTumor TypingHistopathologyMalignant DiseaseCell BiologyTumoral PathologyBrush BordersMedicineCytopathology
An ultrastructural study of the cell surface of lumen-forming tumors was carried out to determine the distribution of two morphologic markers seen in relation to the microvilli. These are membrane-bound glycocalyceal bodies and microvillous filament cores that penetrate the underlying cytoplasm as rootlets. They were found (especially when in combination) to be valuable in identifying tumors of what is referred to as intestinal-type epithelium, and could be seen in cases in which brush borders were absent. They have been demonstrated in intestinal-type carcinomas of the stomach and gallbladder, in adenocarcinomas of the small and large intestines and pancreatic ducts, in mucin-forming bronchiolar carcinomas, and in certain mucinous ovarian and endocervical tumors. Other tumors, whether mucin-producing or not, have been found to consistently lack these structures.