SummaryThe presence of a high number of infiltrating CD1a + cells in malignant neoplasms has been reported to be associated with an improved prognosis, reduced tumour recurrence and fewer metastases. This study identified a population of CD1a + cells within the lymphoid cell infiltrate in human ductal breast carcinoma (n = 52), which was significantly different from normal breast tissue, in which only two out of nine cases expressed CD1a + cells (P = 0.0192). In the majority of cases, the infiltrate was low compared with the number of macrophages and T cells present (results not shown). There was no correlation between the number of CD1a + cells and tumour grade, with all tumour grades expressing similar numbers of infiltrating CD1a + cells. There was clear evidence, however, that the CD1a + cells were closely associated with tumour cells. It is likely that CD1a + cells have a role in antigen capture and presentation in human tumours, and this study documents the density of CD1a + cells in a large sample of all histological grades of human breast carcinomas.
Mouse monoclonal antibodies reacting with human mammary gland constituents have been generated and characterized in an attempt to raise breast- or breast-cancer-specific antisera. The immunogens used in these studies included fractionated human milk fat globule membrane, the human breast cancer cell line MCF7 and a crude membrane preparation derived from an axillary nodal metastasis from a patient with breast cancer. Of the antibodies obtained, 8 were characterized and found to bind to different structures in the normal breast. The antibody LICR-LON-LC28 recognizes secretory component and binds strongly to normal resting and lactating breast, but only focally to a minority of breast carcinomas. The antibodies LICR-LON-14.1 and 32.2 react strongly with the lactating breast and recognize κ- and β-casein, respectively. Caseins are not produced by breast tumors. The antibodies LICR-LON-TW19.5, H10A and 39.8 all react with carbohydrate epitopes and bind heterogeneously to normal resting breast luminal epithelium and cellular subsets of breast carcinomas. LICR-LON-59.2 and 19.2 react with normal breast myoepithelial cells and the basement membrane, respectively. LICR-LON-59.2 is unusual as a myoepithelial marker in that it stains cells in the majority of breast carcinomas. LICR-LON-19.2 shows extensive reactivity to tumor cell lines in culture but has no reactivity with carcinoma cells from breast biopsies.
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