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Immunocytochemical detection of p16INK4a protein in scraped cervical cells.

Authors :
Pientong C
Ekalaksananan T
Swadpanich U
Kongyingyoes B
Kritpetcharat O
Yuenyao P
Ruckait N
Source :
Acta cytologica [Acta Cytol] 2003 Jul-Aug; Vol. 47 (4), pp. 616-23.
Publication Year :
2003

Abstract

Objective: To develop an immunocytochemical technique for p16INK4a protein detection in scraped cervical cells for cancer screening.<br />Study Design: We took duplicate cervical scrapes from each participant, the first for a Pap smear and the second for p16INK4a protein detection. From a 50-microL cell suspension prepared from the scrape rinsing, a 10-microL aliquot was dropped in a 5-mm-diameter circle on a glass slide, air dried and fixed in 0.1% formal saline (1 hour) and in 95% ethanol (10 minutes). Using the immunocytochemical technique, slides from 30 samples of each Pap diagnosis class were stained sequentially with mouse monoclonal anti-p16INK4a (primary antibody), biotinylated goat antimouse IgG (secondary antibody), horse-radish peroxidase-labelled streptavidin and 3,3'-diaminobenzidine and mixed hydrogen peroxide, then counterstained with hematoxylin. A positive sample had to contain > or = 3 immunoreactive cells. Results were confirmed by western blot analysis of lysates from the remaining 40 microL of each cervical cell suspension.<br />Results: Samples were grouped as control (normal cervical cells), mild dysplasia (ASCUS, LSIL) and high abnormality (HSIL, SCC). Using the immunocytochemical technique, > 95% of the positive (SiHa cells) but 0% of the negative controls (human embryonic lung fibroblast cells) showed immunoreactive cells. All slides displayed a clear background without mucus, and positive cells were stained in both the cytoplasm and nucleus. p16INK4a Protein was detected in 17 of 30 (56.67%) ASCUS and 10 of 30 (33.33%) LSIL and increased with the degree of abnormality to 93.33% (28 of 30) and 96.67% (29 of 30) in the HSIL and SCC group, respectively. Normal cervical cells and degenerated malignant cells were nonimmunoreactive. Western blot analysis confirmed similar positive samples in the low-abnormality group, while the whole high-abnormality group was immunoreactive. A sampling error might have caused the 2 HSIL and 1 SCC sample to be negative using our immunocytochemical technique.<br />Conclusion: p16INK4a Protein detection in scraped cervical cells using the immunocytochemical technique correlated with western blot analysis and was nontraumatic and precise. It offers a significant diagnostic adjunct to the Pap test for cervical cancer screening.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
0001-5547
Volume :
47
Issue :
4
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Acta cytologica
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
12920756
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1159/000326578