A newly recognized type of familial glomerulopathy observed in patients of both sexes in six families is reported. Proteinuria, often within the nephrotic range, microscopic hematuria, hypertension and a slowly decreasing renal function over several years were common. No underlying systemic diseases were identified. Generally, light microscopy showed enlarged glomeruli with minimal hypercellularity and with extensive deposits in the mesangium and subendothelial space. By electron microscopy, granular deposits with some admixture of fibrils were most common. In one family, the deposits were predominantly fibrillary. Immunoglobulins and complement factors were inconstant or lacking. A main finding was a strong immune reactivity to fibronectin, corresponding to the distribution of the deposits. In one patient, the deposits recurred in a renal transplant. There was no indication of systemic deposition. Abnormalities in the metabolism of circulating fibronectin may play a pathogenetic role in this disease of probably autosomal dominant inheritance.
A broad variety of normal human tissues were examined for the expression of Thomsen-Friedenreich (TF)-related histo-blood group antigens, TF (Gal beta 1-3GalNAc alpha 1-R), Tn (TF precursor, GalNAc alpha 1-R), sialosyl-Tn (NeuAc alpha 2-6GalNAc alpha 1-R), considered to be useful in cancer diagnosis and immunotherapy, and sialosyl-TF, the cryptic form of TF. These antigens or, more correctly, glycotopes, were determined by immunohistochemistry with at least two monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) each (except sialosyl-TF) as well as by lectin histochemistry. For a better dissection of sialosyl-TF and TF glycotopes, tissue sections were pretreated with galactose oxidase or the galactose oxidase-Schiff sequence. Staining with mAbs appeared to be more restricted than with the lectins used. Distribution patterns among normal epithelia were different for all four antigens. These antigens were also detected in some non-epithelial tissues. They can be classified in the following sequence according to the frequency of their occurrence in normal tissues: sialosyl-TF > > sialosyl-Tn > Tn > TF. Most of the positively staining sites for TF, Tn, and sialosyl-Tn are located in immunologically privileged areas. The complex results obtained with anti-TF mAbs (after treatment of the tissue sections with sialidase from Vibrio cholerae) and the lectins amaranthin and jacalin revealed a differential distribution of the subtypes of sialosyl-TF [NeuAc alpha 2-3Gal beta 1-3GalNAc alpha 1-R and Gal beta 1-3 (NeuAc alpha 2-6)GalNAc alpha 1-R] in normal human tissues. From our data it can be inferred that TF, Tn, and sialosyl-Tn are promising targets for a cancer vaccine.
We studied the expression of the various cytokeratin (CK) polypeptides and vimentin in tissues of the human eye by applying immunocytochemical procedures using a panel of monoclonal antibodies as well as by performing biochemical analyses of microdissected tissues. Adult corneal epithelium was found to contain significant amounts of the cornea-specific CKs nos. 3 and 12 as well as CK no. 5, and several additional minor CK components. Among these last CKs, no. 19 was found to exhibit an irregular mosaic-like staining pattern in the peripheral zone of the corneal epithelium, while having a predominantly basal distribution in the limbal epithelium. Both the fetal corneal epithelium and the conjunctival epithelium were uniformly positive for CK no. 19. In the ciliary epithelium, co-expression of CKs nos. 8 and 18 and vimentin was detected, whereas in the retinal pigment epithelium, CKs nos. 8 and 18 were dominant. The present data illustrate the remarkable diversity and complexity of CK-polypeptide expression in the human eye, whose significance with respect to histogenetic and functional aspects is, as yet, only partially clear. The unusual distribution of CK no. 19 in different zones of the corneal epithelium may be related to the specific topography of corneal stem cells. The occurrence of the expression of simple-epithelium CKs in the ciliary and pigment epithelium demonstrates that, despite their neuroectodermal derivation, these are true epithelia.
In a comprehensive study, we examined the expression of the membrane and secretory mucins MUC1 and MUC3, respectively, in normal and neoplastic gastrointestinal and breast epithelia before and after specific alterations of their glycan structures by neuraminidase, alpha-fucosidase, or carbohydrate-specific periodate oxidation. MUC1 mRNA was also identified in normal colorectal tissues by in situ hybridization. The data revealed that normal colorectal epithelia express both MUC1 mRNA and protein, which were detectable after periodate oxidation with all tested MUC1-specific antibodies. During tumorigenesis in the colon, MUC1 became recognizable without periodate treatment concomitantly with highly dysplastic lesions and the malignant state. In the breast, in which MUC1 is detectable with most antibodies in normal epithelium as well as in carcinomas, staining could be enhanced by pretreatment with periodate and casually by enzyme treatments. MUC3 was detectable in normal and neoplastic colorectal tissues and was more intensely stained after periodate oxidation. It was absent in normal breast even after pretreatment but was expressed in seven of 20 breast carcinomas. Therefore, incomplete glycosylation, abnormal distribution, and ectopic expression of mucins are characteristics of malignancy. Periodate oxidation may be widely applicable to immunohistochemistry for examining changes in glycosylation and for detecting antigens masked by glycans.
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