Literature DB >> 17000083

Immunocyto- and histochemical profiling of nucleostemin expression: marker of epidermal stem cells?

Lukás Lacina1, Karel Smetana, Barbora Dvoránková, Jirí Stork, Zuzana Plzáková, Hans-Joachim Gabius.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND AND
OBJECTIVE: Because the nucleolar protein nucleostemin is present in bone marrow and neuronal stem cells and malignancies originating thereof we monitored its expression in frozen sections from normal human epidermis, basal cell carcinomas, cultured keratinocytes and cells of the squamous carcinoma line FaDu. In addition, probing the value of this protein as a marker of epidermal stem cells was an aim of this study.
MATERIALS AND METHODS: To further characterize cell features we added analysis of expression of keratins 10 or 19 as markers of terminal differentiation and Ki67 as marker of proliferating cells as well as three adhesion/growth-regulatory galectins.
RESULTS: Immunohistochemical monitoring revealed expression of nucleostemin in cells of both Ki67-positive and -negative nuclei regardless of the K10-expression status. Cultured keratinocytes were positive, when they were prepared from hair follicles and cultured in the presence of feeder cells. A small population of these nucleostemin-positive cells also expressed galectin-1 but not galectins-3 and -9 in their nucleoli. Part of these cells also expressed keratin 19. FaDu cells were strongly positive, illustrating expression in malignant cells which require no feeder layer. Of note, the number of galectin-1-positive nucleoli was reduced in the course of culture.
CONCLUSION: Nucleostemin positivity cannot be considered as marker for stem cells in skin sections. In cultured cells, nucleostemin is expressed in a distinct population of the epidermal cells from hair follicle kept in the presence of a feeder layer, intimating an association of nucleostemin expression with this type of epithelio-mesenchymal interaction which is not essential during propagation of malignant cells.

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Year:  2006        PMID: 17000083     DOI: 10.1016/j.jdermsci.2006.08.008

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Dermatol Sci        ISSN: 0923-1811            Impact factor:   4.563


  5 in total

1.  Head and neck squamous cancer stromal fibroblasts produce growth factors influencing phenotype of normal human keratinocytes.

Authors:  Hynek Strnad; Lukás Lacina; Michal Kolár; Zdenek Cada; Cestmír Vlcek; Barbora Dvoránková; Jan Betka; Jan Plzák; Martin Chovanec; Jana Sáchová; Jaroslav Valach; Markéta Urbanová; Karel Smetana
Journal:  Histochem Cell Biol       Date:  2009-11-19       Impact factor: 4.304

2.  Knocking-down the expression of nucleostemin significantly decreases rate of proliferation of rat bone marrow stromal stem cells in an apparently p53-independent manner.

Authors:  S M Jafarnejad; S J Mowla; M M Matin
Journal:  Cell Prolif       Date:  2008-02       Impact factor: 6.831

3.  Myocardial induction of nucleostemin in response to postnatal growth and pathological challenge.

Authors:  Sailay Siddiqi; Natalie Gude; Toru Hosoda; John Muraski; Marta Rubio; Gregory Emmanuel; Jenna Fransioli; Serena Vitale; Carola Parolin; Domenico D'Amario; Erik Schaefer; Jan Kajstura; Annarosa Leri; Piero Anversa; Mark A Sussman
Journal:  Circ Res       Date:  2008-06-02       Impact factor: 17.367

4.  Immunohistochemical study of doublecortin and nucleostemin in canine brain.

Authors:  E De Nevi; P Marco-Salazar; D Fondevila; E Blasco; L Pérez; M Pumarola
Journal:  Eur J Histochem       Date:  2013-03-20       Impact factor: 3.188

5.  Nucleostemin as a possible progenitor marker of corneal epithelial cells.

Authors:  Motoko Kawashima; Tetsuya Kawakita; Satoru Yoshida; Shigeto Shimmura; Kazuo Tsubota
Journal:  Mol Vis       Date:  2009-06-10       Impact factor: 2.367

  5 in total

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