Abstract

Oral carcinomas are known to have a greater apoptotic index than normal oral epithelium, evident as shrinking cells with condensed chromatin. In this study, these morphologically apoptotic cells stained positively for cleaved (active) caspase-3. In normal oral epithelium, cleaved caspase-3 positive-cells were only rarely detected. The terminally differentiated surface epithelial layers did not express cleaved caspase-3. The caspase-3 pro-enzyme showed a gradient of expression in normal oral epithelium, decreasing with differentiation. No expression was detectable in surface epithelial layers. Lack of expression of the major 'executioner' caspase-3 may, at least in part, explain differences in morphology between terminally differentiated and apoptotic cells. In cancers of different tissue origins, caspase-3 pro-enzyme expression can be either increased or decreased compared with normal tissue counterparts. To determine how caspase-3 expression alters during oral carcinogenesis, caspase-3 expression was compared in 39 samples of normal oral epithelium and 54 oral squamous cell carcinomas. Squamous cell carcinomas had more intense caspase-3 staining than normal epithelium (p < 0.001). Moreover, within the oral squamous cell carcinoma series, there was significantly more intense nuclear and cytoplasmic staining with increasing STNMP stage (p = 0.017 and 0.03, respectively). This was a reflection of significant associations with site (S), palpable lymph nodes (N), and differentiation (P). Both caspase-3 staining intensity and the percentage of cells positive for caspase-3 were inversely associated with differentiation. Studies of the mechanisms by which high levels of caspase-3 expression are tolerated in oral carcinoma cells may identify targets that can be used to harness caspase-3 overexpression for therapeutic benefit.

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