Abstract

Clinical studies have shown that in vivo fluorescence spectroscopy can improve the diagnosis of cervical precancer. Recent work suggests that epithelial fluorescence increases, whereas stromal fluorescence decreases, with precancer. However, the microanatomic and biochemical sources of fluorescence in living cervical tissue have not yet been established. This study aims to characterize the origins of living normal and precancerous cervical fluorescence at microscopic levels using laser-scanning fluorescence confocal microscopy. Ten pairs of colposcopically normal and abnormal biopsies were obtained; transverse, 200 microm thick, short-term tissue cultures were prepared and imaged when viable with UV (351-364 nm) and 488 nm excitation before and after addition of the vital dye, Mitotracker Orange. In normal epithelium basal epithelial cells showed cytoplasmic fluorescence; parabasal, intermediate and superficial cells showed fluorescence only at the periphery of the cell. In low-grade precancers cytoplasmic fluorescence was visible in the bottom one-third of the epithelium; in high-grade precancers cytoplasmic fluorescence was visible throughout the lower two-thirds of the epithelium. Cytoplasmic fluorescence was colocalized with the MitoTracker probe and is attributed to mitochondrial reduced form of nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide at UV excitation and mitochondrial flavin adenine dinucleotide at 488 nm excitation. Stromal fluorescence originated from matrix fibers; with the development of precancer the density and fluorescence intensity of matrix fibers decrease. Autofluorescence properties of precancerous cervix reflect an increased number of metabolically active mitochondria in epithelial cells and a reduced stromal fluorescence, which can be an indicator for altered communication between precancerous epithelium and stroma. These changes can explain differences in in vivo fluorescence spectra of normal and precancerous cervical tissue.

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