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S100 A and B expression in normal and inflamed human limbus

PURPOSE: To study the expression of S100 A and B family proteins in normal human limbus and to analyze modification of the expression in inflammatory conditions. METHODS: The total expression of members of the S100 family and the expression of A4, A8, A9, and B individually were evaluated in nine no...

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Autores principales: Nubile, Mario, Lanzini, Manuela, Calienno, Roberta, Mastropasqua, Rodolfo, Curcio, Claudia, Mastropasqua, Alessandra, Agnifili, Luca, Mastropasqua, Leonardo
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Molecular Vision 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3559090/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23378728
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author Nubile, Mario
Lanzini, Manuela
Calienno, Roberta
Mastropasqua, Rodolfo
Curcio, Claudia
Mastropasqua, Alessandra
Agnifili, Luca
Mastropasqua, Leonardo
author_facet Nubile, Mario
Lanzini, Manuela
Calienno, Roberta
Mastropasqua, Rodolfo
Curcio, Claudia
Mastropasqua, Alessandra
Agnifili, Luca
Mastropasqua, Leonardo
author_sort Nubile, Mario
collection PubMed
description PURPOSE: To study the expression of S100 A and B family proteins in normal human limbus and to analyze modification of the expression in inflammatory conditions. METHODS: The total expression of members of the S100 family and the expression of A4, A8, A9, and B individually were evaluated in nine normal human corneal limbi, collected from cadaver healthy donors, in particular in the limbal epithelial crypts (LECs), and in five inflamed limbi obtained from enucleated eyes. S100 protein distribution was determined with immunohistochemistry staining analysis. RESULTS: Cytoplasmic expression of total S100 proteins was observed in 100% of LECs; in contrast, the inflamed tissues were completely negative, and faint positivity was observed in only one case. Moreover, cytoplasmic expression of S100 A4 and A9 was uniformly found in the entire LECs in all samples analyzed, while S100 A8 positivity was observed in only 44.4% of cases and only in the cells localized in the central area of the LEC. Positivity for S100 B was not observed in all samples analyzed. CONCLUSIONS: As reported in the literature, normal limbal epithelial cells show strong expression of S100 proteins. A novel finding of this study was the expression for the limbal epithelial crypts. In particular, S100 A4 and A9, which are normally involved in regulating a wide range of biologic effects, including cell motility, survival, and differentiation, are the most expressed members in healthy limbal crypts. In inflamed tissues, expression of S100 proteins was dramatically decreased. S100 proteins, and in particular S100 A4 and S100 A9, can be useful as markers of early changes in stem cell niches due to inflammation.
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spelling pubmed-35590902013-02-01 S100 A and B expression in normal and inflamed human limbus Nubile, Mario Lanzini, Manuela Calienno, Roberta Mastropasqua, Rodolfo Curcio, Claudia Mastropasqua, Alessandra Agnifili, Luca Mastropasqua, Leonardo Mol Vis Research Article PURPOSE: To study the expression of S100 A and B family proteins in normal human limbus and to analyze modification of the expression in inflammatory conditions. METHODS: The total expression of members of the S100 family and the expression of A4, A8, A9, and B individually were evaluated in nine normal human corneal limbi, collected from cadaver healthy donors, in particular in the limbal epithelial crypts (LECs), and in five inflamed limbi obtained from enucleated eyes. S100 protein distribution was determined with immunohistochemistry staining analysis. RESULTS: Cytoplasmic expression of total S100 proteins was observed in 100% of LECs; in contrast, the inflamed tissues were completely negative, and faint positivity was observed in only one case. Moreover, cytoplasmic expression of S100 A4 and A9 was uniformly found in the entire LECs in all samples analyzed, while S100 A8 positivity was observed in only 44.4% of cases and only in the cells localized in the central area of the LEC. Positivity for S100 B was not observed in all samples analyzed. CONCLUSIONS: As reported in the literature, normal limbal epithelial cells show strong expression of S100 proteins. A novel finding of this study was the expression for the limbal epithelial crypts. In particular, S100 A4 and A9, which are normally involved in regulating a wide range of biologic effects, including cell motility, survival, and differentiation, are the most expressed members in healthy limbal crypts. In inflamed tissues, expression of S100 proteins was dramatically decreased. S100 proteins, and in particular S100 A4 and S100 A9, can be useful as markers of early changes in stem cell niches due to inflammation. Molecular Vision 2013-01-28 /pmc/articles/PMC3559090/ /pubmed/23378728 Text en Copyright © 2013 Molecular Vision. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Nubile, Mario
Lanzini, Manuela
Calienno, Roberta
Mastropasqua, Rodolfo
Curcio, Claudia
Mastropasqua, Alessandra
Agnifili, Luca
Mastropasqua, Leonardo
S100 A and B expression in normal and inflamed human limbus
title S100 A and B expression in normal and inflamed human limbus
title_full S100 A and B expression in normal and inflamed human limbus
title_fullStr S100 A and B expression in normal and inflamed human limbus
title_full_unstemmed S100 A and B expression in normal and inflamed human limbus
title_short S100 A and B expression in normal and inflamed human limbus
title_sort s100 a and b expression in normal and inflamed human limbus
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3559090/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23378728
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