Tumor-associated macrophages (TAMs) are an important component of leukocyte infiltration in tumors. TAMs can be classified into M1 and M2 phenotypes. In the present study, the expression of CD204, an M2-polarized macrophage receptor, was investigated by immunohistochemistry in the area surrounding TAMs in 101 cases of canine mammary gland tumor (CMT). We examined the relationship between M2-polarized TAMs and malignancy, histological subtype, histological grade, molecular subtype, hormone receptor (HR) status, and clinical obesity indices. The mean number of CD204-positive macrophages was significantly higher in malignant CMTs than in benign CMTs ( P = .000). The number of CD204-positive macrophages differed significantly between histological grades ( P = .000) and were significantly higher in grade III than in grades I and II. Moreover, the mean number of CD204-positive macrophages was significantly higher in HR-negative malignant CMTs than in HR-positive malignant CMTs ( P = .035) and in malignant CMTs with lymphatic invasion compared to malignant CMTs without lymphatic invasion ( P = .000). These findings suggest that CD204-positive macrophages might affect the development and behavior of CMTs and highlight the potential of CD204 as a prognostic factor.
Chromosome 8p21-12 has been reported to be a susceptibility locus for schizophrenia based on genome-wide linkage scans. After neuregulin 1 (NRG1) was identified as a positional candidate gene for schizophrenia in this locus, several independent association studies have reported controversial results. To determine whether genetic variations in this locus are associated with schizophrenia in the Korean population, we investigated multiplex families and unrelated patients using linkage and association analyses. Seven microsatellite markers in 8p21-12 were genotyped for 40 families with schizophrenia, and a non-parametric linkage analysis was applied. The association study was performed with 242 unrelated schizophrenia patients and the same number of normal controls for three single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs), two microsatellite markers and their haplotypes. A significant linkage signal was observed on D8S1769, which is located 352 kb upstream of the 5' end of the first exon of NRG1 for two ("narrow" and "narrow with auditory hallucination (AH)") of the three adopted phenotype classes. In the association study, the G allele of SNP8NRG241930 was significantly in excess in the subgroup of patients with AHs. We also found haplotypes which were associated with schizophrenia with a protective effect. This study provides additional suggestive evidence for both the linkage and association of genetic variations on 8p12, a locus of NRG1, with schizophrenia. NRG1 might either play a role in the predisposition to schizophrenia or be in linkage disequilibrium (LD) with a causal locus of this illness.
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