Abstract

Normal human oral (check) mucosa was studied to discover whether the oral cavity resembles the Mucosal Immune System (MIS) or the Skin Immune System (SIS). Immunophenotypes of lymphocyte subsets and Langerhans cells (LC) with their exact locations in the epithelium and papillary layer of the normal buccal mucosa were determined and compared with data of normal human skin. In a double staining procedure, the distribution of T-lymphocytes in relation to blood and lymph vessels was determined. Immunophenotyping of LC was done with a CD1a monoclonal antibody. In contrast to the skin, T-lymphocytes in buccal mucosa are not primarily perivascular in location. They are more or less randomly distributed on both sides of the basement membrane. The epithelium of the buccal mucosa contains about 37 times as many T-lymphocytes as the epidermis of normal skin. T-cell numbers in the papillary layer are more or less comparable. The CD4/CD8 ratios of about 1/2 in the epithelium of buccal mucosa and 1/4 in the skin indicates preferential presence of the CD8 subset in both sites, but the helper/inducer T-lymphocytes play a much greater role in the epithelium of the buccal mucosa when compared with skin. B-lymphocytes were not found in the epithelium and papillary layer of the buccal mucosa. Thus, immune response associated cells in buccal mucosa do not show the MIS pattern since B cells are absent. It has more in common with SIS but differences are also apparent. In the epithelium of the buccal mucosa the density of LC does not differ significantly from that of the skin, but the papillary layer of the buccal mucosa contains significantly fewer LC than the skin. As in the skin most of the LC of the buccal mucosa are found in the epithelium.

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