Abstract. We tested Tankyrase-1 mRNA expression in colon cancer patients to evaluate the prognostic role of this parameter by real-time RT-PCR in a retrospective group of 82 unselected patients with colon cancer. Paired cancer and corresponding not affected tissues were used. Laser-assisted microdissection was used to measure Tankyrase-1 mRNA in homogeneous cancer cell populations and in normal colon epithelium of the same patients. Tankyrase-1 mRNA in colon cancers, as a mean, was significantly higher than in paired not affected tissues (p<0.0001), but its level correlates inversely with a cancer progression stage. Survival analysis indicated that lower Tankyrase-1 mRNA expression in colon cancers was significantly associated to reduced patient survival (p=0.019) and disease-free interval (p=0.035), confirmed also in a multivariate analysis.
Anatomical illustration has evolved through the centuries, first having artistic and educational purposes and later more strictly medical objectives. Between the eleventh and fifteenth centuries, the analytical model (representation of individual parts, organs and systems) gave way to the composite model (description of the human body as a whole). Between the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, there was a reversal of tendency: initially the anatomist requested the help of artists, but later the artist asked anatomists to check the accuracy of his work. In this way, anatomical illustration reached a high level of precision. This period also saw the creation of the “La Specola” Zoology Museum's collection of anatomical wax models. Initiated in the eighteenth century, it also included a series of contemporary colour illustrations executed by various artists. Most of the illustrations concern human anatomy, while a small number deal with comparative anatomy. These illustrations, each accompanied by one or more explanatory sheets, were produced to help explain the corresponding wax models. The anatomical wax model collection has been well preserved through the centuries, maintaining its ancient splendour, and it is the object of continuing research and restoration interventions.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.