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Research Article

SIALYL-Tn ANTIGEN DISTRIBUTION IN HELICOBACTER PYLORI CHRONIC GASTRITIS IN CHILDREN: AN IMMUNOHISTOCHEMICAL STUDY

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Pages 117-129 | Published online: 09 Jul 2009
 

Abstract

Sialyl-Tn antigen (STn) is a mucin-type carbohydrate normally present in goblet cells of small and large bowel. STn expression has been demonstrated to occur in complete and incomplete intestinal metaplasia as well as in many carcinomas but in no normal gastric cell. The aim of our present study was to evaluate the distribution of STn in Helicobacter pylori chronic gastritis (HpCG) of pediatric patients. Eighteen gastric biopsies from 15 children (mean age: 11.5 years) with HpCG, 9 gastric biopsies from 9 children without H. pylori infection, and 1 heterotopic gastric mucosa in Meckel's diverticulum were immunostained using the anti-STn antibody STn1 (18/18), NCL-MUC-1 (7/18), and NCL-MUC-2 (18/18) antibodies. Also, sulfated mucosubstances were investigated with the Alcian Blue-Periodic Acid Schiff (AB-PAS), pH 1.0 stain. Although with different intensity (weak in 5/18, moderate 9/18, and intense 4/18) all cases with HpCG exhibited STn immunoreactivity. The expression of STn was found to be located mainly to the supranuclear region of the epithelial cells at the foveolae and glandular necks, with occasional cells showing diffuse cytoplasmic staining. When reactivity was intense, it was for the most part found in the cells at the neck of the glands. The mucus out of the luminal border above the positive cells was usually also stained. MUC-1 was negative (2/7) or weakly positive (5/7) in a few surface mucous cells. MUC-2 was negative (16/18) or occasionally detected in some foveolar and surface cells (2/18). AB-PAS pH 1.0 revealed the presence of sulfomucins in the cytoplasm of isolated cells of gastric pits and glands of most cases (11/15). None of these findings was observed in the control group. We conclude that STn can be identified in gastric cells of pediatric patients with HpCG and that this does not correlate with other mucosubtances markers. Thefindings could indicate that minimal intestinal metaplasia takes place in children with HpCG.

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