Abstract

The expression of the apoptosis-related proteins Bcl-2 and Bax was investigated by immunohistochemistry in the normal non-lactating human mammary gland in relation to cell proliferation and apoptosis. In order to characterize individual Bax/Bcl-2-immunoreactive cells, the epithelial markers cytokeratin 14 and 19 and the macrophage marker CD 68 were used. Secretory-like differentiation of epithelial cells was characterized by histochemistry and lectin staining of surface glycoconjugates. Cell proliferation was exclusively found in glandular epithelial cells with broad contact to the ductular lumen, whereas nuclei with apoptosis-related DNA fragmentation were seen predominantly in basally located glandular epithelial cells and in myoepithelial cells. Weak immunoreactivity for Bcl-2 and Bax was present throughout all epithelia, suggesting a balance between pro- and antiapoptotic effects in the majority of epithelial cells. However, specific cells showed a strong staining for Bax or Bcl-2. The strongly Bcl-2-immunoreactive epithelial cells were not identical with proliferating cells, but they resembled them in configuration and in the luminal intraepithelial position. In contrast, the strongly Bax-positive epithelial cells had no or only a narrow contact to the ductular lumen. The different patterns of Bax/Bcl-2 immunoreactivity in specific glandular epithelial cells suggest that there are also different grades of susceptibility towards apoptotic stimuli in individual glandular epithelial cells. We conclude that specific Bax/Bcl-2 expression patterns could reflect particular cell differentiation states, and that the strongly Bcl-2-positive cells in part could represent epithelial stem cells.

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