Basal cells of H-Dunning tumor are myoepithelial cells. A comparative immunohistochemical and ultrastructural study with male accessory sex glands and mammary gland
- PMID: 2022486
- DOI: 10.1007/BF00266961
Basal cells of H-Dunning tumor are myoepithelial cells. A comparative immunohistochemical and ultrastructural study with male accessory sex glands and mammary gland
Abstract
Recent immunohistochemical studies have shown that basal cells in human prostatic epithelium are not myoepithelial cells. Since in the literature the Dunning tumor, originally described as a rat prostate carcinoma derived from the dorsolateral prostate of a Copenhagen rat, was reported to have myoepithelial cells, a comparative immunohistochemical and ultrastructural study was performed in the H-, HIF- and AT3-lines of the Dunning tumor, the male accessory sex glands (ventral, dorsal, lateral prostate, coagulating gland, bulbourethral gland) and the mammary gland of both Copenhagen and Wistar rats. Mono- and polyclonal antibodies directed against intermediate filament proteins (cytokeratin, desmin, vimentin) and the contractile proteins (alpha-actin, muscle type specific myosin, tropomyosin) were used along with phalloidin decoration of F-actin. As in the human prostate, none of the rat prostate lobes in either strains did contain basal cells expressing cytokeratin along with alpha-actin, myosin and tropomyosin Cells representing fully differentiated myoepithelial cells, however, were present as anticipated in the mammary gland, the bulbourethral gland and the H-tumor line of the Dunning tumor. This finding is difficult to reconcile with the contention of a prostatic origin of the H-Dunning tumor. Further studies are required to classify the epithelial parental tissue in order to define the true origin of the H-Dunning tumor and the tumor lines derived thereof.
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