We obtained immunohistochemical profiles of several keratin proteins during experimentally induced carcinogenesis in hamster cheek-pouch mucosa using a polyclonal antibody (TK; detecting keratins with molecular masses of 41-65 kilodalton) and two monoclonal antibodies (KL1, 55- to 57-kilodalton keratins; PKK1; 40-, 45- and 52.5-kilodalton keratins). The squamous epithelium of normal pouch mucosa exhibited positive TK staining in all layers, KL1 staining in the spinous layer and PKK1 staining in the basal layer, thus indicating a regional or zonal distribution pattern. Epithelia undergoing basal hyperplasia showed irregular localization of PKK1 binding, while hyperkeratinized lesions exhibited the binding pattern found in normal epithelium. In case of epithelial dysplasia, there was reduced KL1 staining in spinous cells and decreased PKK1 staining in the basal and parabasal layers. Papillomas exhibited a rather zonal distribution of keratin staining. All squamous-cell carcinomas, irrespective of their degree of keratinization and infiltration pattern, showed slight or no PKK1 staining. Such lesions were only positive for KL1-detectable keratins in keratinizing tumour cells and exhibited an irregular distribution of TK binding. The expression of keratin proteins during carcinogenesis in hamster cheek-pouch mucosa may parallel that of keratins in human squamous-cell carcinomas originating in the oral mucosa.
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