Abstract
Retinoids reverse potentially malignant lesions and inhibit the development of second primary cancers in patients with head-and-neck cancer. Many of the effects of retinoids result from modulation of gene expression by 2 distinct classes of nuclear receptor, RARs and RXRs; alterations in their expression can lead to tumorigenesis. To determine whether aberrations in expression of the receptors are related to the development of betel- and tobacco-related oral cancer, we used specific monoclonal antibodies against RARalpha and RARbeta to detect expression of these proteins in 30 histopathologically normal tissues, 45 potentially malignant lesions (leukoplakia) with histological evidence of either hyperplasia (31 cases) or dysplasia (14 cases) and 64 oral squamous-cell carcinomas (SCCs) by immunohistochemistry. Of the 30 normal oral tissues analysed, 8 cases showed detectable levels of RARalpha protein, while 10 cases did not show detectable RARbeta immunoreactivity. Immunostaining for RARalpha protein was observed in 12/31 (39%) hyperplastic lesions, 6/14 (43%) dysplastic lesions and 43/64 (67%) oral SCCs. Expression of RARalpha in oral SCC was significantly associated with the histological differentiation status of tumours (p = 0.016). In contrast, lack of detectable immunoreactivity was observed in 19/31 (61%) hyperplastic lesions, 8/14 (57%) dysplastic lesions and 21/64 (33%) oral SCCs. The hallmark of the study was the significant increase in RARalpha immunopositivity in oral SCCs compared to normal tissue (p = 0.0005) and hyperplastic lesions (p = 0.016). One intriguing feature was the significant decrease in RARbeta immunopositivity in hyperplastic lesions compared with normal oral mucosa (p = 0.05) as well as in oral SCCs compared with normal tissues (p = 0.0008).
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