The immunoreactivity of OV-TL 12/30, a monoclonal anti-keratin 7 antibody (Mab), was investigated on frozen as well as paraffin-embedded human tissues. Its reactivity patterns were compared with another well-characterized monoclonal antibody to keratin 7 (RCK 105), and with broadly cross-reacting monoclonal (OV-TL 12/5) as well as polyclonal (pKer) keratin antisera. In frozen sections of normal and malignant human tissues both keratin 7 Mabs gave similar staining patterns. The immunoreactivity for OV-TL 12/30 and the polyclonal antibody (pKer) in tissue sections fixed in 4 per cent formalin or Bouin solution, was completely restored when pretreated with 0.1 per cent pronase, 0.1 per cent trypsin in phosphate-buffered saline (PBS) or with 0.5 per cent pepsin in 0.01 N HCl. Except for loss of immunoreactivity on human normal stomach surface epithelium and glandular mucous cells, Mab OV-TL 12/30 reacted strongly positive with essentially all those formalin- or Bouin-fixed paraffin-embedded tissues that had been shown to stain in non-fixed, frozen sections. In addition to the good correlation in human tissues, a complete correlation between the reactivity on frozen and paraffin-embedded human carcinomas (n = 86) was found as well. While both RCK 105 (anti-keratin 7) and OV-TL 12/5 (anti-keratin 5, 7, 14, 19) did not stain on paraffin-embedded sections, the polyclonal control antiserum (pKer) lost immunoreactivity in some cell types (e.g. mucous cells in compound glands, hepatocytes, pancreatic acinar cells, and proximal and distal convoluted tubules of the kidney). Our study shows that the keratin 7 Mab OV-TL 12/30 is an excellent marker for tumour histopathology since it is reactive in paraffin-embedded formalin-fixed human tissues.
A Sewall Wright strain-2 guinea pig model producing malignant ascites after injection of a diethylnitrosamine-induced hepatocellular carcinoma cell suspension (Line-10) was used to demonstrate the multilayered settling of tumor cells on the peritoneal surface, frequently followed by the formation of papillary projections and the early invasion in a proliferating submesothelial tissue. At the border of tumor cells and the desmoplastic tissue the malignant cells changed their shape and generally two categories were recognized. Often multilayering, atypical flat cells covered the stromal tissue, while mostly rounded ones invaded using their branched penetration processes, being devoid of cationized ferritin, which was only present on the luminal sides of all cellular elements. Flattened malignant cells, penetrating processes and invading cells lost their microvillous surface pattern. The infiltrating cells were often only detectable with the monoclonal antibody 10 TL 40 and the anti-cytokeratin OV TL 12-5, demonstrating the need for immunohistochemistry in diagnosing solitary invading malignant cells in light microscopy. It appeared that still numerous mesothelial cells were found scattered deeply within the desmoplastic tissue. These former lining cells were identified by their junctions and the presence of remnants of basal lamina as well as by their microvillous 5'-nucleotidase activity.
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