Abstract
The monoclonal antiparathyroid antibody E11 reacts with a glycoprotein of high molecular weight, which acts as a calcium receptor on the surface of parathyroid cells and mediates calcium regulation of parathyroid hormone (PTH) release. Reduced expression of the calcium receptor has been implicated as a cause of the defect in PTH regulation in the pathological parathyroid parenchyma of patients with hyperparathyroidism (HPT). The present study evaluated the efficacy of immunostainings with the E11 antibody in comparison with routine histopathological methods including staining by the oil red O technique for histological discrimination between normal and pathological parathyroid glands. Parathyroid tissue from euparathyroid individuals invariably presented intense and homogeneous surface staining, with the antibody on virtually all chief cells, while the pathological glands from patients with HPT consistently showed heterogeneous and reduced immunostaining. Even minimally enlarged pathological glands from individuals with mild hypercalcemia and the normal-sized glands associated with adenomas displayed parathyroid chief cells with reduced antibody reactivity. The monoclonal antiparathyroid antibody should constitute a useful tool in parathyroid histopathology not only by its ability to identify the parathyroid tissue, but also by directly demonstrating the functionally normal and abnormal cells within the parathyroid tissue.
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