Title of article
Cell proliferation and apoptosis in canine oral papillomatosis
Author/Authors
Karakurt ، Emin Department of Pathology - Faculty of Veterinary Medicine - Kafkas University , Coskun ، Nuvit Department of Virology - Faculty of Veterinary Medicine - Kafkas University , Aydin ، Ugur Department of Surgery - Faculty of Veterinary Medicine - Kafkas University , Dag ، Serpil Department of Pathology - Faculty of Veterinary Medicine - Kafkas University , Beytut ، Enver Department of Pathology - Faculty of Veterinary Medicine - Kafkas University , Ataseven ، Veysel Soydal Department of Virology - Faculty of Veterinary Medicine - Mustafa Kemal University , Yilmaz ، Volkan Department of Virology - Faculty of Veterinary Medicine - Kafkas University , Dogan ، Firat Department of Virology - Faculty of Veterinary Medicine - Mustafa Kemal University , Nuhoglu ، Hilmi Department of Pathology - Faculty of Veterinary Medicine - Kafkas University , Ermutlu ، Celal Sahin Department of Surgery - Faculty of Veterinary Medicine - Kafkas University , Yildiz ، Ayfer Department of Pathology - Faculty of Veterinary Medicine - Kafkas University
From page
75
To page
82
Abstract
This study was aimed at the evaluation of cell proliferation, p53 level and apoptotic index by immunohistochemical methods in canine oral papillomatosis. The study material comprised of tumor tissue samples taken from six dogs being admitted to the Pathology Department of Faculty of Veterinary Medicine, Kafkas University, Kars, Türkiye. Choice of immunohistochemical staining was avidin-biotin peroxidase method. Cases of canine oral papillomatosis, determined to have been caused by canine papillomavirus-1, were found to have a rather high cell proliferation index. Furthermore, all cases were immunohisto-chemically demonstrated to carry a mutant p53 gene. Despite the mutation of p53 gene, the shift in the Bax/Bcl-2 ratio of dogs diagnosed with tumor was in favor of the pro-apoptotic Bax gene. The apoptotic mechanism was determined to occur through both the caspase-dependent and caspase-independent pathways. While the lesions occupied the entire oral cavity in some cases, histopathologically, malignant transformation was not detected in any of the six cases.
Keywords
Apoptosis , Canine , p53 , Papillomatosis , Proliferation
Journal title
Veterinary Research Forum
Journal title
Veterinary Research Forum
Record number
2769825
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