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1.
The various epithelial cells of the lower respiratory tract and the carcinomas derived from them differ markedly in their differentiation characteristics. Using immunofluorescence microscopy and two-dimensional gel electrophoresis of cytoskeletal proteins from microdissected tissues we have considered whether cytokeratin polypeptides can serve as markers of cell differentiation in epithelia from various parts of the human and bovine lower respiratory tract. In addition , we have compared these protein patterns with those found in the two commonest types of human lung carcinoma and in several cultured lung carcinoma cell lines. By immunofluorescence microscopy, broad spectrum antibodies to cytokeratins stain all epithelial cells of the respiratory tract, including basal, ciliated, goblet, and alveolar cells as well as all tumor cells of adenocarcinomas and squamous cell carcinomas. However, in contrast, selective cytokeratin antibodies reveal cell type-related differences. Basal cells of the bronchial epithelium react with antibodies raised against a specific epidermal keratin polypeptide but not with antibodies derived from cytokeratins characteristic of simple epithelia. When examined by two-dimensional gel electrophoresis, the alveolar cells of human lung show cytokeratin polypeptides typical of simple epithelia (nos. 7, 8, 18 and 19) whereas the bronchial epithelium expresses, in addition, basic cytokeratins (no. 5, small amounts of no. 6) as well as the acidic polypeptides nos. 15 and 17. Bovine alveolar cells also differ from cells of the tracheal epithelium by the absence of a basic cytokeratin polypeptide. All adenocarcinomas of the lung reveal a "simple-epithelium-type" cytokeratin pattern (nos. 7, 8, 18 and 19). In contrast, squamous cell carcinomas of the lung contain an unusual complexity of cytokeratins. We have consistently found polypeptides nos. 5, 6, 8, 13, 17, 18 and 19 and, in some cases, variable amounts of cytokeratins nos. 4, 14 and 15. Several established cell lines derived from human lung carcinomas (SK-LU-1, Calu -1, SK-MES-1 and A-549) show a uniform pattern of cytokeratin polypeptides (nos. 7, 8, 18 and 19), similar to that found in adenocarcinomas. In addition, vimentin filaments are produced in all the cell lines examined, except for SK-LU-1.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

2.
A monoclonal antibody derived from a mouse immunized with bovine epidermal prekeratin has been characterized by its binding to cytoskeletal polypeptides separated by one- or two-dimensional gel electrophoresis and by immunofluorescence microscopy. This antibody (KG 8.13) binds to a determinant present in a large number of human cytokeratin polypeptides, notably some polypeptides (Nos. 1, 5, 6, 7, and 8) of the 'basic cytokeratin subfamily' defined by peptide mapping, as well as a few acidic cytokeratins such as the epidermis-specific cytokeratins Nos. 10 and 11 and the more widespread cytokeratin No. 18. This antibody reacts specifically with a wide variety of epithelial tissues and cultured epithelial cells, in agreement with previous findings that at least one polypeptide of the basic cytokeratin subfamily is present in all normal and neoplastic epithelial cells so far examined. The antibody also reacts with corresponding cytokeratin polypeptides in a broad range of species including man, cow, chick, and amphibia but shows only limited reactivity with only a few rodent cytokeratins. The value of this broad-range monoclonal antibody, which apparently recognizes a stable cytokeratin determinant ubiquitous in human epithelia, for the immunohistochemical identification of epithelia and carcinomas is discussed.  相似文献   

3.
Cytokeratin polypeptides of human epidermis, of epithelia microdissected from various zones of the pilosebaceous tract (outer root-sheath of hair follicle, sebaceous gland), and of eccrine sweat-glands have been separated by one- and two-dimensional gel electrophoresis and characterized by binding of cytokeratin antibodies and by peptide mapping. The epithelium of the pilosebaceous tract has three major keratin polypeptides in common with interfollicular epidermis (two basic components of mol wts 58,000 and 56,000 and one acidic polypeptide of mol wt 50,000); however, it lacks basic keratin polypeptides in the mol wt range of 64,000-68,000 and two acidic keratin-polypeptides of mol wts 56,000 and 56,500 and contains an additional characteristic acidic cytokeratin of mol wt 46,000. Another cytokeratin polypeptide of mol wt 48,000 that is prominent in hair-follicle epithelium is also found in nonfollicular epidermis of foot sole. Both epidermis and pilosebaceous tract are different from eccrine sweat-gland epithelium, which also contains two major cytokeratins of mol wts 52,500 and 54,000 (isoelectric at pH 5.8-6.1) and a more acidic cytokeratin of mol wt 40,000. A striking similarity between the cytokeratins of human basal-cell epitheliomas and those of the pilosebaceous tract has been found: all three major cytokeratins (mol wts 58,000; 50,000; 46,000) of the tumor cells are also expressed in hair-follicle epithelium. The cytokeratin of mol wt 46,000, which is the most prominent acidic cytokeratin in this tumor, is related, by immunological and peptide map criteria, to the acidic keratin-polypeptides of mol wts 48,000 and 50,000, but represents a distinct keratin that is also found in other human tumor cells such as in solid adamantinomas and in cultured HeLa cells. The results show that the various epithelia present in skin, albeit in physical and ontogenic continuity, can be distinguished by their specific cytokeratin-polypeptide patterns and that the cytoskeleton of basal-cell epitheliomas is related to that of cells of the pilosebaceous tract.  相似文献   

4.
Epithelial cells contain a class of intermediate-sized filaments formed by proteins related to epidermal alpha-keratins ('cytokeratins'). Different epithelia can express different combinations of cytokeratin polypeptides widely varying in apparent mol. wt. (40 000-68 000) and isoelectric pH (5.0-8.5). We have separated, by two-dimensional gel electrophoresis, cytokeratin polypeptides from various tissues and cultured cells of man, cow, and rodents and examined their relatedness by tryptic peptide mapping. By this method, a subfamily of closely related cytokeratin polypeptides has been identified which comprises the relatively large (greater than or equal to mol. wt. 52 500 in human cells) and basic (pH greater than or equal to 6.0) polypeptides but not the smaller and acidic cytokeratins. In all species examined, the smallest polypeptide of this subfamily is cytokeratin A, which is widespread in many simple epithelia and is the first cytokeratin expressed during embryogenesis. This cytokeratin polypeptide subfamily is represented by at least one member in all epithelial and carcinoma cells examined, indicating that polypeptides of this subfamily serve an important role as tonofilament constitutents . Diverse stratified epithelia and tumours derived therefrom contain two or more polypeptides of this subfamily, and the patterns of expression in different cell types suggest that some polypeptides of this subfamily are specific for certain routes of epithelial differentiation.  相似文献   

5.
Epithelial cells contain a cytoskeletal system of intermediate-sized (7 to 11 nm) filaments formed by proteins related to epidermal keratins (cytokeratins). Cytoskeletal proteins from different epithelial tissues (e.g. epidermis and basaliomas, cornea, tongue, esophagus, liver, intestine, uterus) of various species (man, cow, rat, mouse) as well as from diverse cultured epithelial cells have been analyzed by one and two-dimensional gel electrophoresis. Major cytokeratin polypeptides are identified by immunological cross-reaction and phosphorylated cytokeratins by [32P]phosphate labeling in vivo.It is shown that different epithelia exhibit different patterns of cytokeratin polypeptides varying in molecular weights (range: 40,000 to 68,000) and electrical charges (isoelectric pH range: 5 to 8.5). Basic cytokeratins, which usually represent the largest cytokeratins in those cells in which they occur, have been found in all stratified squamous epithelia examined, and in a murine keratinocyte line (HEL) but not in hepatocytes and intestinal cells, and in most other cell cultures including HeLa cells. Cell type-specificity of cytokeratin patterns is much more pronounced than species diversity. Anatomically related epithelia can express similar patterns of cytokeratin polypeptides. Carcinomas and cultured epithelial cells often continue to synthesize cytokeratins characteristic of their tissue of origin but may also produce, in addition or alternatively, other cytokeratins. It is concluded: (1) unlike other types of intermediate-sized filaments, cytokeratin filaments are highly heterogeneous in composition and can contain basic polypeptides: (2) structurally indistinguishable filaments of the same class, i.e. cytokeratin filaments, are formed, in different epithelial cells of the same species, by different proteins of the cytokeratin family; (3) vertebrate genomes contain relatively large numbers of different cytokeratin genes which are expressed in programs characteristic of specific routes of epithelial differentiation; (4) individual cytokeratins provide tissue- or cell type-specific markers that are useful in the definition and identification of the relatedness or the origin of epithelial and carcinoma cells.  相似文献   

6.
Intermediate filament proteins of normal epithelia of the human and the bovine male urogenital tract and of certain human renal and bladder carcinomas have been studied by immunofluorescence microscopy and by two-dimensional gel electrophoresis of cytoskeletal fractions from microdissected tissue samples. The patterns of expression of cytokeratin polypeptides differ in the various epithelia. Filaments of a cytokeratin nature have been identified in all true epithelial cells of the male urogenital tract, including renal tubules and rete testis. Simple epithelia of renal tubules and collecting ducts of kidney, as well as rete testis, express only cytokeratin polypeptides nos. 7, 8, 18, and 19. In contrast, the transitional epithelia of renal pelvis, ureter, bladder, and proximal urethra contain, in addition to those polypeptides, cytokeratin no. 13 and small amounts of nos. 4 and 5. Most epithelia lining the human male reproductive tract, including those in the epididymis, ductus deferens, prostate gland, and seminal vesicle, synthesize cytokeratin no. 5 in addition to cytokeratins nos. 7, 8, 18, and 19 (cytokeratin no. 7 had not been detected in the prostate gland). Cytokeratin no. 17 has also been identified, but in very low amounts, in seminal vesicle and epididymis. The cytokeratin patterns of the urethra correspond to the gradual transition of the pseudostratified epithelium of the pars spongiosa (cytokeratins nos. 4, 5, 6, 13, 14, 15, and 19) to the stratified squamous epithelium of the fossa navicularis (cytokeratins nos. 5, 6, 10/11, 13, 15, and 19, and minor amounts of nos. 1 and 14). The noncornified stratified squamous epithelium of the glans penis synthesizes cytokeratin nos. 1, 5, 6, 10/11, 13, 14, 15, and 19. In immunofluorescence microscopy, selective cytokeratin antibodies reveal differential staining of different groups or layers of cells in several epithelia that may relate to the specific expression of cytokeratin polypeptides. Human renal cell carcinomas show a simple cytokeratin pattern consisting of cytokeratins nos. 8, 18, and 19, whereas transitional cell carcinomas of the bladder reveal additional cytokeratins such as nos. 5, 7, 13, and 17 in various proportions. The results shows that the wide spectrum of histological differentiation of the diverse epithelia present in the male urogenital tract is accompanied by pronounced changes in the expression of cytokeratin polypeptides and suggest that tumors from different regions of the urogenital tract may be distinguished by their cytokeratin complements.  相似文献   

7.
The cytokeratin family of intermediate filament (IF) proteins can be grouped into the epithelial polypeptides ("soft alpha-keratins"), of which at least 19 exist in the various human epithelia, and the hair-type cytokeratins ("hard alpha-keratins"), which are typical of trichocytes, i.e., the living hair-forming cells. We have recently shown [34] that the hair follicles from diverse mammalian species contain a set of eight major cytokeratin polypeptides, four each of the acidic (type I) and the basic (type II) subfamily, which are different from all known epithelial cytokeratins. In addition, we have identified two new minor trichocytic cytokeratin polypeptides, designated Hax (type I) and Hbx (type II). Antibodies against trichocytic cytokeratins that do not crossreact with any of the epithelial cytokeratins have enabled us to study the expression of both kinds of cytokeratin in the various cell types of human and bovine hair follicles. Using immunofluorescence microscopy, we have observed intense reactions of trichocytic cytokeratins only in cells contributing to the forming hairs, i.e., hair shaft, medulla and cuticle, whereas immunostaining of the peribulbar matrix cells was weaker, if at all detectable. In contrast, epithelial cytokeratins were localized in both the inner and outer root sheath epithelia but, surprisingly, also in certain portions of the trichocyte column, notably cells of the cuticle, certain medullary cells, and trichocytes of the basalmost peripapillary cell layers. Cells coexpressing trichocytic and epithelial cytokeratins have been identified by double-label immunofluorescence microscopy. Epithelial cytokeratins of the inner and outer root sheath epithelia include, most remarkably, "simple-epithelium-type" cytokeratins 8, 18, and 19; these occur in certain peribulbar regions, in distinct patterns, but with variable frequencies. The occurrence of simple epithelial cytokeratins in hair follicles has also been confirmed by high-sensitivity immunoblotting of follicular polypeptides separated by gel electrophoresis. Vimentin-positive cells were abundantly interspersed (in some follicles, but not in all) between the trichocytes of the peripapillary cone, most of them probably being melanocytes. The cell-type complexity of the hair follicle and the different patterns of cytoskeletal protein expression in the various hair follicle cells are discussed in relation to the development and growth of this organ.  相似文献   

8.
Using a panel of antibodies against different cytokeratins in immunofluorescence microscopy on frozen tissue sections and two-dimensional gel electrophoresis of cytoskeletal proteins from these tissues, we have studied the tissue distribution of cytokeratins in a fish, the rainbow trout Salmo gairdneri. We have distinguished at least 14 different cytokeratin polypeptides in only a limited number of tissues, thus demonstrating the great complexity of the cytokeratin pattern in a fish species. The simplest cytokeratin pattern was that present in hepatocytes, comprising one type-II (L1) and two type-I (L2, L3) polypeptides that appear to be related to mammalian cytokeratins 8 and 18, respectively. Two or all three cytokeratins of this group were also identified in several other epithelial tissues, such as kidney. Epithelia associated with the digestive tract contained, in addition, other major tissue-specific cytokeratins, such as components D1-D3 (stomach, intestine and swim bladder) and B1 and B2 (biliary tract). With the exception of D1, all these polypeptides were also found in a cultured cell line (RTG-2). Epidermal keratinocytes contained D1 and six other major cytokeratins, termed E1-E6. The most complex cytokeratin pattern was that found in the gill epithelium. Surprisingly, antibodies specific for cytokeratins of the L1-L3 group also reacted with certain cell-sheet-forming tissues that are not considered typical epithelia and in higher vertebrates express primarily, if not exclusively, vimentin. Such tissues were (a) endothelia, including the pillar cells of the "gill filaments", (b) scale-associated cells, and (c) the ocular lens epithelium, and also several nonepithelial cell types, such as (d) fibroblasts and other mesenchymal cells, (e) chondrocytes, (f) certain vascular smooth muscle cells, and (g) astroglial cells of the optic nerve. The differences between the patterns of cytokeratin expression in this fish species and those of higher vertebrates are discussed. It is concluded that the diversity of cytokeratins has already been established in lower vertebrates such as fish, but that the tissue-expression pattern of certain cytokeratins has been restricted during vertebrate evolution. We discuss the value of antibodies specific for individual cytokeratin polypeptides as marker molecules indicating cell and tissue differentiation in fish histology, embryology, and pathology.  相似文献   

9.
Mammary epithelium is composed of ductal, alveolar, and myoepithelial cells, and undergoes dramatic responses in growth, differentiation, and function to hormonal stimuli during the four stages of the mammary developmental cycle represented in virgin, pregnant, lactating, and involuting animals. To determine if progression of the epithelium through the cycle is accompanied by changes in cytoskeletal composition, particularly the keratins, the polypeptides in cytoskeletal extracts from BALB/c mouse mammary tissues were analyzed by one- and two-dimensional gel electrophoresis combined with immunoblots using polyclonal and monoclonal antikeratin antibodies. The major polypeptides in cytoskeletal fractions enriched in intermediate filaments included seven acidic and three basic components ranging in molecular weight from 40,000 to 90,000. Two major polypeptides of Mr 50,000 and 40,000, along with two minor components of Mr 57,000 and 55,000 were identified as keratins. The polypeptide profiles of mammary glands from virgin, pregnant, lactating, and involuting mice were very similar, indicating a remarkable stability of cytoskeletal composition during hormonal shifts and periods of minimal or maximal cell growth and differentiated function. The data also suggest that ductal and alveolar cells express the same set of cytoskeletal polypeptides, including keratins. Mammary cells grown in primary culture exhibited a loss or reduction in most of the basic polypeptides, a large increase in an acidic Mr 55,000 keratin, and the appearance of a prominent acidic polypeptide of Mr 46,000. The latter results demonstrate that keratin expression in mouse mammary epithelial cells is subject to regulation by certain environmental factors.  相似文献   

10.
Living hair-forming cells (trichocytes) were obtained from basal portions of human, bovine and ovine hair-follicles, free from contaminations of root-sheath epithelia. Their intermediate filament (IF) cytoskeleton was studied by gel electrophoresis of the native, i.e. non-S-carboxymethylated polypeptides, by peptide-map analysis of the individual components, by reconstitution experiments and by immunological methods. The IF protein complement of trichocytes from all three species is characterized by a very similar set of eight highly conserved alpha-keratin polypeptides, comprising four members of the basic (type II; Mr 56,500-60,000) and four members of the acidic (type I; Mr 41,000-44,000) cytokeratin subfamily. None of these eight trichocyte alpha-keratin polypeptides, which form heterotypic complexes and IF in vivo and in vitro, is identical to any of the epithelial cytokeratins of the same species. All the trichocyte-specific cytokeratins are native polypeptides encoded by different mRNAs, as demonstrated by in vitro translation of hair follicle mRNA. The same polypeptides are also found in mature hairs, although with different patterns of modification. Our study provides the first analysis of the native unmodified alpha-keratin polypeptides of trichocytes and hairs and therefore allows a direct comparison of these with the epithelial cytokeratins and other IF proteins from the same species. These findings indicate that, during fetal hair-follicle formation, the differentiation of trichocytes from epithelial cells involves a complete cessation of the synthesis of epithelial cytokeratins and a marked induction of the synthesis of a complex set of trichocyte-specific cytokeratins.  相似文献   

11.
Using immunofluorescence microscopy and two-dimensional gel electrophoresis, we compared the cytoskeletal proteins expressed by human amnion epithelium in situ, obtained from pregnancies of from 10-wk to birth, with the corresponding proteins from cultured amnion epithelial cells and cultures of cells from the amniotic fluid of 16 week pregnancies. Epithelia of week 16 fetuses already display tissue-specific patterns of cytokeratin polypeptides which are similar, although not identical, to those of the corresponding adult tissues. In the case of the simple amnion epithelium, a complex and characteristic complement of cytokeratin polypeptides of Mr 58,000 (No. 5), 56,000 (No. 6), 54,000 (No. 7), 52,500 (No. 8), 50,000 (No. 14), 46,000 (No. 17), 45,000 (No. 18), and 40,000 (No. 19) is present by week 10 of pregnancy and is essentially maintained until birth, with the addition of cytokeratin No. 4 (Mr 59,000) and the disappearance of No. 7 (Mr 54,000) at week 16 of pregnancy. In full-term placentae, the amnion epithelium displays two morphologically distinct regions, i.e., a simple and a stratified epithelium, both of which express the typical amnion cytokeratin polypeptides. However, in addition the stratified epithelium also synthesizes large amounts of special epidermal cytokeratins such as No. 1 (Mr 68,000), 10 (Mr 56,500), and 11 (Mr 56,000). In culture amnion epithelial cells obtained from either 16-wk pregnancies or full-term placentae will continue to synthesize the amnion-typical cytokeratin pattern, except for a loss of detection of component No. 4. This pattern is considerably different from the cytokeratins synthesized by cultures of cells from amniotic fluids (cytokeratins No. 7, 8, 18, and 19, sometimes with trace amounts of No. 17) and from several so-called "amnion epithelial cell lines." In addition, amnion epithelial cells in situ as well as amnion epithelial cell cultures appear to be heterogeneous in that they possess some cells that co-express cytokeratins and vimentin. These observations lead to several important conclusions: In contrast to the general concept of recent literature, positively charged cytokeratins of the group No. 4-6 can be synthesized in a simple, i.e., one-layered epithelium. The change from simple to stratified amnion epithelium does not require a cessation of synthesis of cytokeratins of the simple epithelium type, but in this case keratins characteristic of the terminally differentiated epidermis (No. 1, 10, and 11) are also synthesized.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

12.
Abstract. The cytokeratin polypeptides of microdissected epidermis and hair follicles from human fetuses (from week 10 of pregnancy until birth) have been analysed by two-dimensional gel electrophoresis. Two-layered epidermis in 10-week fetuses contains major amounts of cytokeratin polypeptides typical of simple epithelia (components Nos. 8, 18, and 19 according to Moll et al. [31]). These cytokeratins are gradually reduced in their relative amounts and eventually disappear in the multilayered epidermis of later stages. At advanced stages of development, cytokeratins characteristic of adult epidermis are detected and finally predominate. These include the large and basic epidermal cytokeratin No. 1 (apparent molecular weight 68,000) which is already present in the three-layered epidermis of 13-week fetuses. Hair follicle germ cells of 13-week fetuses differ from fetal epidermal keratinocytes and show a very simple cytokeratin pattern, dominated by only two major polypeptides (Nos. 5 and 17). More developed hair follicles of 20-week fetuses have established a cytokeratin pattern similar to, but not identical with, that of hair follicles from adult skin. Different staining patterns obtained by indirect immunofluorescence microscopy using cytokeratin antibodies with different specificities suggest that, in three-layered epidermis, different cytokeratin patterns might exist in the specific cell layers. Such a differential location might explain the high complexity of polypeptide components found in fetal skin. Possible contributions of peridermal cytokeratins to this complex pattern of fetal epidermis are discussed.  相似文献   

13.
We have analyzed the expression of cytokeratin polypeptides in subcolumnar reserve cells of the human uterine endocervical mucosa and the other epithelial cells using immunoperoxidase and immunofluorescence microscopy as well as by applying two-dimensional gel electrophoresis to microdissected cytoskeletal preparations. Endocervical columnar cells were uniformly positive for antibodies directed against the simple epithelium-type cytokeratins nos. 7, 8, 18, and 19, while a variable proportion of these cells was stained by an antibody against cytokeratin no. 4. Reserve cells were not only positive for cytokeratins nos. 8 (weakly and variably) and 19 but were also decorated by antibody KA 1, which reacts with cytokeratins present in stratified squamous epithelia. This last antibody selectively decorated reserve cells even when they were flat and inconspicuous. Antibody KA 1 uniformly stained the ectocervical squamous epithelium, the basal cells of which were also decorated by antibodies directed against cytokeratins nos. 8 (weakly and variably) and 19. Ectocervical suprabasal cells were positive, to a variable extent, for antibodies against cytokeratins nos. 4, 10/11, and 13. Gel electrophoresis revealed the presence of squamous-type cytokeratins nos. 5 and 17 in reserve cell-rich, but not in reserve cell-free, endocervical mucosa. We also analyzed the distribution pattern of these cells, as revealed by antibody KA 1, in the endocervical mucosa of 26 uteri. In all the specimens examined reserve cells were present, but their numbers exhibited considerable variation. In some cases these cells were confined to small islets localized deep within the cervical canal and lacked any continuity with the squamous epithelium. The expression of cytokeratins nos. 5 and 17 in reserve cells indicates that these cells have undergone a low level of squamous differentiation. The additional expression of cytokeratins nos. 8 and 19 in these cells points to a relationship with simple epithelial cells. The present data would seem to favor the view that reserve cells originate in situ from the columnar epithelium; however, this would imply an acquisition of new differentiation properties.  相似文献   

14.
Epithelia-derived tumors (carcinomas) can be distinguished from mesenchymally derived tumors by the presence of intermediate-sized filaments of the cytokeratin type, which usually coincides with the absence of other types of intermediate-sized filaments such as vimentin filaments. In the course of diagnostic examinations of human tumors, using immunofluorescence microscopy, we have come across a case of an unusual carcinoma (Primary tumor and lymph node metastasis) positively stained not only with cytokeratin antibodies but also with immunoglobulins present in vimentin antisera. Therefore, this tumor, a cloacogenic carcinoma apparently derived from the rectal-anal transitional region, has been examined in greater detail using both immunofluorescence microscopy and immuno-electron microscopy as well as gel electrophoretic analysis of cytoskeletal polypeptides from total tumor tissue and from microdissected nodules enriched in carcinoma cells. The unusual reaction of the carcinoma cells with immunoglobulins present in seven different (rabbit or guinea pig) antisera raised against vimentin, has been found to be diminished after absorption on purified cytokeratin or total epidermal cytoskeletal material, but not after absorption on purified vimentin. Gel electrophoretic analysis of tumor cytoskeletons showed an unusual complex pattern of cytokeratin polypeptides containing relatively large (Mr 68,000 and Mr 58,000) neutral-to-slightly basic cytokeratins, as are typically found in epidermis and other stratified squamous epithelia, as well as several smaller acidic cytokeratins, including a Mr 40,000 polypeptide found in certain nonstratified epithelial such as colon and small intestine. Total tumor also showed the inclusion of some vimentin which, however, was significantly decreased in analysis of excised carcinoma nodules. Examining antibody binding to polypeptides separated by gel electrophoresis and blotted on nitrocellulose paper, we have found that antisera raised against vimentin contained not only vimentin antibodies but also immunoglobulins which specifically bound to the largest cytokeratin component. We conclude that the unusual reaction of immunoglobulins present in vimentin antisera with cytokeratin filament bundles does not represent specific binding to vimentin in these carcinoma cells, but is due to a component obviously widespread in vimentin antisera which binds specifically to a cytokeratin present in this type of tumor but not in most other carcinomas. It is proposed that use is made in diagnostic examinations of vimentin antisera or affinity-purified vimentin antibodies that have been pre-absorbed on cytokeratin protein, in order to eliminate such disturbing reactions.  相似文献   

15.
Epithelial cells contain complexes of cytokeratin filaments (tonofilaments) with specific domains of the plasma membrane that appear as symmetric junctions, i.e. desmosomes, or as asymmetric hemi-desmosomes. These regions of filament-membrane-attachment are characterized by 14 to 20 nm thick dense plaques (desmosomal plaque). In isolated desmosome-tonofilament complexes or other desmosomal fractions from various stratified squamous epithelia (e.g. bovine muzzle epidermis and tongue mucosa) desmosomal plaque structures are recognized and show a relatively high resistance to various extraction buffers and detergents. Such fractions enriched in desmosomal plaque material are also enriched in two prominent polypeptide bands of apparent molecular weights 250,000 (desmoplakin I) and 215,000 (desmoplakin II) which appear, on two-dimensional gel electrophoresis, as two distinct polypeptides isoelectric near neutral pH. These two polypeptides are present in almost equimolar amounts and each of them appears as a series of isoelectric variants, including some labeled by [32P]phosphate in tissue slices. The two desmoplakin polypeptides are closely related as shown by tryptic peptide map analysis and are different from keratin-like proteins and other major polypeptides of desmosome-rich fractions. Guinea pig antibodies raised against desmoplakins and specific for these proteins do not cross-react with other desmosomal antigen(s) or constituents of other types of junctions. Using desmoplakin antibodies we have identified desmoplakins as the major constituents of the desmosomal plaques present in epithelial and myocardiac cells of diverse species. The significance of this group of cell type-specific membrane-associated cytoskeletal proteins and their possible cytoskeletal functions are discussed.  相似文献   

16.
Three monoclonal antibodies, 1C7, 2D7 and 6B10, directed against cytokeratins of human esophagus were isolated and characterized by one- and two-dimensional gel electrophoresis and by immunohistochemical staining on sections of human epithelial tissues. In immunoblot experiments, antibodies of clones 1C7 (IgG2a) and 2D7 (IgG2b) react only with cytokeratin no. 13 of the acidic (type I) subfamily of cytokeratin polypeptides (Mr 54000; pI 5.1); antibodies of clone 6B10 (IgG1) detect only cytokeratin no. 4 (Mr 59000; pI 7.3) of the basic (type II) cytokeratin subfamily and allows the detection of this protein and possible degradation products at high sensitivity. In immunohistochemical staining all three antibodies stain non-cornifying squamous epithelium (e.g., tongue, esophagus, anus) and transitional epithelium of the bladder. Antibodies of clone 6B10 also stain cells in certain ciliated pseudostratified epithelia and ductal epithelia of various exocrine glands. These monoclonal antibodies are the first examples of antibodies specific for individual cytokeratin polypeptides characteristic of certain complex epithelia. They allow the identification of distinct minor populations of cells present in certain complex and glandular epithelia and in tumors derived therefrom which hitherto have not been distinguished. The possible reasons for the occurrence of cell type heterogeneity of cytokeratin expression in complex epithelia and in some carcinomas are discussed.  相似文献   

17.
Cells forming hair and nail material are characterized by the synthesis of members of a particular group of alpha-keratin polypeptides (trichocytic cytokeratins. "T cytokeratins") different from epithelial cytokeratins ("E cytokeratins"). As the precursor cells to trichocytes are derived from fetal epidermal keratinocytes expressing only E cytokeratins, we have studied the patterns of expression of both T and E cytokeratins in developing human hair-and nail-forming tissues of different fetal stages, by immunocytochemistry using antibodies specific for certain T or E cytokeratins and by two-dimensional gel electrophoresis and immunoblotting. In developing hair follicles up to the early bulbous-peg stage (weeks 12-15 of gestational age), only certain E but no T cytokeratins were identified. T cytokeratins were first detected in the late bulbous-peg stage (in week-14 scalp skin) in certain cells of the central part of the hair cone. In hair-producing follicles (weeks 18-25), the lower hair matrix cells were positive for certain E cytokeratins, whereas T cytokeratins appeared in the uppermost portion of the matrix and, most prominently, in the maturing trichocytes. From the late bulbous-peg stage on. E cytokeratin antibody Ks13.1 selectively decorated the inner root sheath. In finger nail "anlagen", T cytokeratins were detected first in week 12 and 13 fetuses, specifically in cells of the lunula region. In more-advanced stages of nail formation, expression of T cytokeratins extended not only to the upper layers of the ventral nail matrix but was also found, albeit more sparsely, in cells of the whole nail-bed epithelium. Throughout these developmental stages, coexpression of T and E cytokeratins was noted in certain cells, including E cytokeratin 19. While in earlier stages E cytokeratins 10/11, characteristic of epidermal-type cornification, were noted in different regions, including the superficial stratum of the nail bed epithelium, they were later restricted to the epithelium of the proximal nail fold. The results show that terminal trichocytic differentiation starts, both in ontogeny and during the steady growth of hairs and nails, in cells expressing E cytokeratins and that coexpression of E and T polypeptides occurs in both kinds of appendages. While in the hair follicle, the change to the exclusive synthesis of T cytokeratins appears to take place relatively abruptly and simply, the development of nail structures from the ventral nail matrix seems to be more gradual and is characterized by more-complex patterns of coexpression of both kinds of cytokeratins.  相似文献   

18.
The epithelium of the human tongue shows diverse morphological variations from one site to another and even within the epithelium of the same papilla. This complexity has led to confusion regarding tongue epithelium as being orthokeratinized, parakeratinized, or nonkeratinized. Cytokeratins have been shown to characterize different epithelia. The present paper describes cytokeratin expression by adult tongue epithelia and relates their distribution to morphology. Six healthy human tongue specimens were obtained after plastic surgery and cytokeratin expression was investigated immunohistochemically, using a panel of 15 antibodies for cytoskeletal proteins, and biochemically using two-dimensional gel electrophoresis. The results showed that the ventral and lateral surfaces of the tongue are related to the nonkeratinizing stratified squamous epithelia, esophageal type, whereas the dorsal surface showed mixed expression of cytokeratins. In the tip of filiform and on the surface of fungiform papillae, cytokeratins of terminal differentiation are expressed as skin type; and in the rest of the papillae as well as in interpapillary areas, the epithelium expresses esophageal type cytokeratins. Certain simple epithelial cytokeratins were found in taste buds. Cytokeratin 19 was also detected in the basal cell layer of all esophageal type epithelia in the tongue. The present results provide basis for studies on the biological events in epithelial differentiation during development and in pathology.  相似文献   

19.
Different clonal cell lines have been isolated from cultures of mammary gland epithelium of lactating cow’s udder and have been grown in culture media containing high concentrations of hydrocortisone, insulin, and prolactin. These cell (BMGE+H), which grow in monolayers of typical epithelial appearance, are not tightly packed, but leave intercellular spaces spanned by desmosomal bridges. The cells contain extended arrays of cytokeratin fibrils, arranged in bundles attached to desmosomes. Gel electophoresis show that they synthesize cytokeratins similar, if not identical, to those found in bovine epidermis and udder, including two large (mol wt 58,500 and 59,000) and basic (pH range: 7-8) and two small (mol wt 45,500 and 50,000) and acidic (pH 5.32 and 5.36) components that also occur in phosphorylated forms. Two further cytokeratins of mol wts 44,000 (approximately pH 5.7) and 53,000 (pH 6.3) are detected as minor cytokeratins in some cell clones. BMGE+H cells do not produce vimentin filaments as determined by immunofluorescence microscopy and gel electrophoresis. By contrast, BMGE-H cells, which have emerged from the same original culture but have been grown without hormones added, are not only morphologically different, but also contain vimentin filaments and a different set of cytokeratins, the most striking difference being the absence of the two acidic cytokeratins of mol wt 50,000 and 45,500. Cells of the BMGE+H line are characterized by an unusual epithelial morphology and represent the first example of a nonmalignant permanent cell line in vitro that produces cytokeratin but not vimentin filaments. The results show that (a) tissue-specific patterns of intermediate filament expression can be maintained in permanent epithelial cell lines in culture, at least under certain growth conditions; (b) loss of expression of relatively large, basic cytokeratins is not an inevitable consequence of growth of epithelial cells in vitro. Our results further show that, during culturing, different cell clones with different cytoskeletal composition can emerge from the same cell population and suggest that the presence of certain hormones may have an influence on the expression of intermediate filament proteins.  相似文献   

20.
Translational products of mRNAs coding for non-epidermal cytokeratins   总被引:18,自引:5,他引:13       下载免费PDF全文
Total RNA and poly(A)+ RNA were isolated from tissues and cultured cells of various mammalian species (bovine muzzle epidermis and bladder urothelium; rat hepatoma cells; human cell lines HeLa, MCF-7 and A-431) and examined by translation in vitro using the reticulocyte lysate system. Polypeptides were separated and identified by two-dimensional electrophoresis and cytokeratins were selectively enriched from the translation assays by co-polymerization with added heterologous cytokeratins. In all three species, non-epidermal cytokeratins A, D and mol. wt. 40,000 (corresponding to numbers 8, 18 and 19 of the human cytokeratin catalog of Moll et al., 1982) were identified as translation products capable of co-polymerization with epidermal keratins. Several other basic and other acidic cytokeratins were also identified as translational products. In addition, two unidentified polypeptides (mol. wt. 52,000 and 43,000) which were minor polypeptides in cytoskeletons and translation assays were found to be specifically enriched in co-polymers with bovine epidermal keratins. The results indicate that many, perhaps all, non-epidermal cytokeratins characteristic of simple epithelia are genuine products of translation and that their diversity is not due to post-translational modification or processing. These findings, taken together with observations of in vitro translation of epidermal mRNAs, suggest that the diversity of cell type-specific expression of the different members of the cytokeratin polypeptide family is largely due to the cell type-specific synthesis of diverse mRNAs.  相似文献   

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