Abstract

To investigate the disturbance of intercellular adhesion in adenoid cystic carcinoma (ACC), we examined the ultrastructural localization of E-cadherin (E-cad), alpha-catenin (alpha-cat) and beta-catenin (beta-cat) in ACC, and compared it with that in the normal labial gland. Using immuno-electron microscopy, in the normal labial gland, E-cad was found to be uniformly distributed along the plasmalemma, where cells were in close contact with each other, with junctional complexes, desmosomes and interdigitations; expression of alpha-cat and beta-cat was also detected. In ACC, which was classified into tubular, cribriform and trabecular types, E-cad expression seemed not to be uniform, but was observed to be along the plasmalemma where cell-to-cell contact was made. On the other hand, expression of alpha-cat or beta-cat was uneven in the trabecular-type cells which were very slender and grew in an infiltrative scattered pattern into the extracellular matrix; that was absent in the cribriform-type cells which made contact with each other mostly at the tip of the cytoplasmic processes. These findings suggest that the neoplastic cells of ACC express E-cad for use in intercellular adhesion, but the cadherin-catenin complex might not operate properly, which is the cause of neoplastic cell dissociation, followed by invasion and metastasis.

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