doi:10.1369/jhc.6A7075.2007
Volume 55 (4): 403-409, 2007 Copyright ©The Histochemical Society, Inc. SIBLING Expression Patterns in Duct Epithelia Reflect the Degree of Metabolic Activity
Department of Oral Biology & Maxillofacial Pathology, School of Dentistry, Medical College of Georgia, Augusta, Georgia (KUEO), and Matrix Biochemistry Unit, Craniofacial and Skeletal Disease Branch, National Institute of Dental and Craniofacial Research, National Institutes of Health, Department of Health and Human Services, Bethesda, Maryland (KUEO,LWF) Correspondence to: Kalu U.E. Ogbureke, Department of Oral Biology and Maxillofacial Pathology, AD1442, School of Dentistry, Medical College of Georgia, 1120 Fifteenth Street, Augusta, GA 30912. E-mail: kogbureke{at}mail.mcg.edu
The SIBLING (Small Integrin-Binding LIgand, N-linked Glycoprotein) family of secreted glycophosphoproteins includes bone sialoprotein (BSP), dentin matrix protein-1 (DMP1), dentin sialophosphoprotein (DSPP), osteopontin (OPN), and matrix extracellular phosphoglycoprotein (MEPE). For many years, they were thought in normal adults to essentially be limited to metabolically active mesenchymal cells that assembled the mineralized matrices of bones and teeth. Over the last decade they have also been upregulated in a variety of tumors. Three of these proteins (BSP, OPN, and DMP1) have been shown to interact with three matrix metalloproteinases (MMP-2, MMP-3, and MMP-9, respectively). Recently, all five SIBLINGs and their MMP partners when known were observed in specific elements of normal ductal epithelia in salivary gland and kidney. We have hypothesized that the SIBLINGs and their MMP partners may be expressed in ductal cells with high metabolic activity. In this paper, we show that all the SIBLINGs (except MEPE) and their MMP partners are expressed in the metabolically active epithelia of human eccrine sweat gland duct but not in the more passive ductal cells of the macaque (monkey) lacrimal gland. It is hypothesized that MEPE expression may be limited to cells involved in active phosphate transport. This manuscript contains online supplemental material at http://www.jhc.org. Please visit this article online to view these materials. (J Histochem Cytochem 55:403409, 2007)
Key Words: SIBLINGs osteopontin bone sialoprotein dentin sialophosphoprotein dentin matrix protein 1 matrix extracellular phosphoglycoprotein protein normal duct epithelia lacrimal gland metabolically active duct
BONE SIALOPROTEIN (BSP), dentin matrix protein-1 (DMP1), dentin sialophosphoprotein (DSPP), osteopontin (OPN), and matrix extracellular phosphoglycoprotein protein (MEPE) have been grouped together as members of the SIBLING (Small Integrin-Binding LIgand N-linked Glycoproteins) family of proteins because of shared common genetic and structural features (Fisher et al. 2001
Except for OPN, expression of the SIBLINGs in normal tissues was generally thought to be limited to bones and teeth (Robey 2002
Eccrine sweat glands perform an important thermoregulatory function of the body. They are distributed nearly widely across the entire human body surface with the exception of the margins of the lips, nail beds, nipples, inner preputial surface, labia minora, glans penis, and glans clitoridis (Groscurth 2002
The eccrine sweat gland is an elongated tubular structure (Figure 1
schematic) with a highly coiled secretory portion (Figures 1C and 1D) and a straight ductular portion (Figure 1B) (Schaller and Plewig 2003
The initial fluid produced by the secretory portion of the sweat gland is isotonic (comparable to the initial fluid of saliva from salivary gland acini, for example). This fluid is modified in the excretory portion of the duct so that the fluid delivered to the skin surface has low Na+ and Cl concentrations (3070 mEq/liter in each case) and an elevated (compared with serum) high K+ (up to 5 mEq/liter), lactate, urea, and ammonia concentrations (Kreyden and Scheidegger 2004
The lacrimal gland is the major source of fluidtearsto the surface of the eye. Morphology of the lacrimal gland mirrors that of the salivary gland in that there are distinct acini and ductal structures (Pflugfelder et al. 2000 Based on the hypothesis that the SIBLINGs and their partner MMPs (when known) are highly expressing in ductal cells with high metabolic requirements, the present study compared the expression of the SIBLINGs and their cognate MMPs in the sweat gland (high metabolic epithelium) and the lacrimal gland (low metabolic epithelium) by IHC.
Tissue Collection Surgical waste from normal human skin in paraffin blocks without patient identifiers was obtained from the Mid-Atlantic Division of the Human Tissue Network (Charlottesville, VA) under an NIH-approved (exempt) protocol. Fresh surgical waste from lacrimal glands of monkey (M. fascicularis) was obtained from the Tissue Distribution Program of the National Primate Research Center (University of Washington; Seattle, WA). Slices of fresh lacrimal gland tissues were fixed in 10% neutral-buffered formalin for 24 hr and routinely processed for paraffin embedding. Four-µm sections were serially cut from all blocks.
IHC
IHC methods were the same as those recently described for the detection of the SIBLING proteins in salivary and kidney sections (Ogbureke and Fisher 2004 Sections were incubated for 1 hr with appropriate antibody diluted in 10% normal goat serum in PBS. The sections then underwent a 4 x 1-min wash cycle with PBS-T before incubation with SuperPicTure Polymer HRP-conjugated broad-spectrum secondary antibody (cat. #87-8963; Zymed) for 10 min. After washing, aminoethylcarbazole (AEC Single Solution, cat. #00-1122; Zymed) was used as chromogenic substrate for 2 min before rinsing and manually counterstaining with Mayer's hematoxylin for 1020 sec. All steps were performed at room temperature. An overlay of Clearmount glaze was applied and, after drying, the slides were coverslipped with Histomount (both from Zymed). Negative controls included the substitution of primary antibody with non-immune rabbit serum or mouse IgG control (cat. #08-6599; Zymed). Positive controls consisted of human salivary gland and monkey kidney sections stained with SIBLING, MMP, mitochondria, or aquaporin antisera. Representative photographic images were captured using the Axioplan2 Universal microscope equipped with an Axiovision digital camera and Axiovision program (Carl Zeiss GmbH; Jena, Germany).
This study surveyed the expression of the SIBLINGs and their known MMP partners in the ductal epithelia of metabolically active eccrine sweat gland and compared this to their expression in the relatively inactive duct of the lacrimal gland. As shown in Figure 2 , immunoreactivity was present for BSP, DMP1, DSPP, OPN, MMP-2, MMP-3, and MMP-9, mainly in the ductal cells. The SIBLINGs with known MMP partners, OPN (Figure 2A), BSP (Figure 2B), and DMP1 (Figure 2C) colocalized with their cognate MMPs (MMP-3) (Figure 2D), MMP-2 (Figure 2E), and MMP-9 (Figure 2F), respectively. DSPP expression was uniformly intense in cells of the secretory and excretory eccrine sweat gland (Figure 2G). For all four SIBLINGs, expression was diffusely cytoplasmic and perinuclear. Furthermore, the intensity of immunoreactivity for OPN was observed to be higher in the excretory portion (Figure 2A, asterisk) than in the secretory portion (Figure 2A, arrow) of the sweat gland. There was no immunoreactivity for the fifth member of the SIBLING family, MEPE, in the eccrine sweat glands (not shown). Immunoreactivity for all SIBLINGs and their cognate MMPs was absent in the connective tissue cells and stroma of the eccrine sweat gland. Intense immunoreactivity for human mitochondria (Figure 2H) was included to emphasize the high metabolic potential of the eccrine sweat duct. Similar intensely positive immunoreactivity for human mitochondria was observed in the salivary gland ducts (see supplementary Figure 2S-K) and kidney nephron (not shown) to serve as positive control. Negative control consisted of preimmune mouse IgG1 (Figure 2I) and preimmune rabbit IgG (see supplementary Figure 2S-J) on eccrine sweat glands.
In contrast, no immunoreactivity in the acini and duct systems of the lacrimal gland was observed for any of the five SIBLINGs or their known MMP partners (representative results, Figure 3A for OPN). Immunoreactivity for mitochondria antibody within the lacrimal gland tissue was low to negative (Figure 3B, also right half of Figure 3C) but positive within the adjoining muscular structure (Figure 3C, left half), verifying the relatively low metabolic potential of the lacrimal gland ductal epithelial cells. To validate the quality of lacrimal tissues for IHC, immunoreactivity for aquaporin 5 (AQP5), known to be highly expressed in the acini of lacrimal glands (Ohashi et al. 2003
Individual members of the SIBLING family of proteins were first discovered in bones and teeth. These tissues are known to have very high metabolic rates due to the synthesis and biomineralization of large amounts of matrix. SIBLING expression outside the mineralized tissues was next described in a variety of epithelial tumors including those of breast, prostate, thyroid, and lung (Bellahcene et al. 1994 Expression of SIBLINGs and their partner MMPs in the salivary gland and kidney duct systems led to the hypothesis that these proteins may be expressed in other metabolically active ductal epithelia. To test this hypothesis, we chose to look for the SIBLINGs and their MMP partners (when known) in two other relatively simple epithelial ductal systems: one with a high metabolism potential, the other with a relatively low metabolism. The sweat gland, with its high requirement for energy for the rapid recovery of salts from the initial isotonic fluid, was hypothesized to express some or all of the SIBLING/MMP complexes, whereas the lacrimal gland duct with its relatively low requirement for energy for essentially passively conducting the isotonic fluid to the surface should exhibit low or complete lack of SIBLING/MMP expression. The findings indicate that the high energy-requiring sweat gland ducts do express four acidic SIBLINGs, OPN, BSP, DSPP, and DMP1, along with their known MMP partners (MMP-2, MMP-3, and MMP-9), whereas the lacrimal gland expressed none. There was no expression of MEPE in either of the tissues. It is logical that the high metabolic activities of the ductal cells of the sweat and salivary glands and the tubular cells of the nephron result in damage to the cell surface and pericellular and/or local basement membrane proteins by oxidative byproducts. Because these epithelial cells possess significant longevity (and are not thought to be aided by any helper cells), it is reasonable to hypothesize that they must have their own mechanisms to digest and remove proteins damaged by free radicals and other oxidative byproducts.
The structurally similar but more passive and low-energy-requiring lacrimal gland ductal system lacked SIBLING and MMP expression but was positive for the control protein, AQP5 (Ohashi et al. 2003
Lack of MEPE expression in both the sweat glands and the lacrimal glands provides additional evidence that MEPE function in duct epithelia may be different from that of the other SIBLING family members. MEPE was first found associated with small tumors that caused phosphate wasting (hypophosphatemic osteomalacia) and was hypothesized to be a phosphate-controlling hormone (Rowe et al. 2000
In summary, SIBLING/MMP profile of the lacrimal gland has provided a significant comparison to that of the sweat gland, as well as that of the salivary gland and kidney previously reported (Ogbureke and Fisher 2004
This research was supported in part by the Intramural Research Program of the National Institute of Dental and Craniofacial Research (NIDCR), National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD. We thank Ms. Li Li (Craniofacial and Skeletal Disease Branch, NIDCR) for assistance with histological tissue preparation and immunohistochemistry.
Received for publication July 28, 2006; accepted December 19, 2006
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