| Literature DB >> 29313597 |
Cristina Maxia1, Daniela Murtas, Michela Corrias, Ignazio Zucca, Luigi Minerba, Franca Piras, Cristiana Marinelli, Maria Teresa Perra.
Abstract
Pterygium, an ultraviolet radiation (UV)-related disease, is a relatively benign process, but since it displays tumor-like features, it has been proposed to be a neoplastic- like growth disorder. Vitamin D performs a number of functions in addition to calcium homeostasis, as inhibition of cell proliferation, activation of apoptotic pathways, and inhibition of angiogenesis. Since the antitumor actions of vitamin D are mediated primarily through the nuclear vitamin D receptor (VDR), the aim of the present study was to investigate vitamin D status in patients with pterygium and in control subjects, and VDR immunohistochemical expression in samples of pterygium and normal conjunctiva in order to evaluate a possible role of vitamin D pathway in the pathogenesis of the disease. Serum vitamin D concentration was measured among 41 patients with pterygium and 47 volunteers by an automated chemiluminescence immunoassay. Moreover, 23 formalin- fixed and paraffin-embedded pterygium biopsy samples and 24 conjunctiva specimens were treated for the immunohistochemical demonstration of VDR using the streptavidin-biotin alkaline phosphatase method. No differences were observed about vitamin D level between patient with pterygium and control group, but significant differences between VDR immunolocalization in pterygium and normal conjunctiva were observed (P=0.00001). In conjunctiva, the immunoreactivity, localized mainly in cytoplasm of epithelial cells, may probably demonstrate VDR regulation of cell growth, differentiation, and apoptosis, while in pterygium VDR co-localization in the nucleus and cytoplasm of epithelial cells may indicate alternative nuclear pathways by which vitamin D might exert its antiinflammatory and anti-proliferative effects by the regulation of gene expression.Entities:
Keywords: Pterygium; conjunctiva; immunohistochemistry.; vitamin D; vitamin D receptor (VDR)
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29313597 PMCID: PMC5686448 DOI: 10.4081/ejh.2017.2837
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur J Histochem ISSN: 1121-760X Impact factor: 3.188
Characteristics of patients selected for the evaluation of serum vitamin D concentration.
| Pterygium (n=41) | Healthy subjects (n=47) | P value* | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Mean age (±SD) | 58.34 (±15.09) | 43.74 (±11.74) | |
| Age range (yrs) | 28-82 | 25-66 | |
| Sex (%) | |||
| Male | 30(73) | 13(28) | |
| Female | 11(27) | 34(72) | |
| Location of the lesion (M/F) | |||
| Nasal side | 28 (19/9) | ||
| Temporal side | 13 (11/2) | ||
| Serum 25(OH)D | |||
| Mean ± SD (ng/mL) | 19.47±7.37 | 18.22±8.01 | >0.05 |
*Student’s t-test.
Characteristics of patients selected for the immunohistochemical localization of vitamin D receptor.
| Pterygium (n=23) | Non-pterygium ubjects (n=24) | P value* | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Mean age (±SD) | 56.04 (±16.4) | 38.87 (±19.61) | |
| Age range (yrs) | 28-82 | 13-78 | |
| Sex (%) | |||
| Male | 16(70) | 8(33) | |
| Female | 7(30) | 16(67) | |
| Location of the lesion (M/F) | |||
| Nasal side | 18 (11/7) | ||
| Temporal side | 5 (5/0) | ||
| Grade | |||
| Atrophic | 6 | ||
| Intermediate | 13 | ||
| Fleshy | 4 | ||
| Disease stage | |||
| Inflamed | 16 | ||
| Quiescent | 7 | ||
| Serum 25(OH)D | |||
| Mean ± SD (ng/mL) | 22.09±7.17 | 22.06±8.28 | >0.05 |
*Student’s t-test.
Evaluation of serum vitamin D concentration among patients with pterygium and the control group.
| Pterygium (n. 41) | Healthy subjects (n. 47) | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 25(OH)D | Patients (n, %) | Mean ± SD (ng/mL) | Median (ng/mL) | Patients (n, %) | Mean ± SD (ng/mL) | Median (ng/mL) |
| Toxic | --- | --- | --- | --- | --- | --- |
| Sufficient | 5(12) | 31.9±2.18 | 31 | 5(11) | 36.12±5.26 | 34.9 |
| Insufficient | 32(78) | 18.97±5.17 | 18.25 | 38(81) | 16.82±4.75 | 15.7 |
| Deficient | 4(10) | 7.89±1.71 | 8.1 | 4(8) | 9.16±0.84 | 9.5 |
Figure 1.Immunohistochemical staining of VDR. A,C,D,E) Pterygium; B) normal conjunctiva; F) human prostate. Pterygium showed a moderate to strong immunoreactivity of the epithelial cells, mostly localized in both nucleus and cytoplasm (A), while conjunctival epithelium exhibited mainly a mild to moderate cytoplasmic staining (B). In pterygium, the nuclear staining was always stronger than the cytoplasmic. A marked VDR immunoreaction was also detected in epithelial goblet cells (A) (arrows) and in the endothelial cells of sub-epithelial microvessels (A,C) (arrowheads). Scattered immunoreactive leucocytes-like cells, morphologically recognizable as cells belonging to the “mononuclear phagocyte system (MPS)”, were found in the subepithelial connective tissue (C) and inside the vessels (D) (asterisks). Negative (E) and positive (F) control sections. Scale bars: 20 μm.
Immnunohistochemical localization of vitamin D receptor in pterygium and normal conjunctiva.
| Localization | Pterygium (positive/total) | Conjunctiva (positive/total) | P value* |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cytoplasm | 3/23 | 16/24 | 0.0001 |
| Nucleus and cytoplasm | 19/23 | 2/24 |
*Fisher’s exact test.