Expression of the high-affinity laminin receptor (67 kDa) in normal human skin and appendages.

2005 
: The interaction of cells with extracellular matrix components plays a significant role in the regulation of cell biology. Laminin is a large glycoprotein involved in fundamental interactions between cells and the basement membrane. Several cell surface receptors are responsible for cell-matrix interactions. The 67 kDa high affinity laminin receptor, 67LR, is involved in the adhesion of normal cells to the laminin network and is also associated with the metastatic phenotype of some tumoral cells. We have investigated the expression of laminin and of the 67LR in normal human skin using immunoperoxidase staining. Twenty samples of skin were analyzed. Antibody against laminin reacted in a continuous linear band at the dermal-epidermal junction, as well as basement membranes of hair follicles, sebaceous and eccrine sweat glands, and dermal blood vessels. The epidermis and the follicular epithelium were negative for laminin. The 67LR seemed not to be expressed on the basal surface of basal keratinocytes. The major expression of this receptor may be detected in the upper half of the spinous layer and in the granular layer. The cells of the outer root sheath in hair follicle showed the same immunohistochemical pattern described for epidermis. In sebaceous glands and in eccrine sweat glands the secreting epithelium was positive. Endothelial cells of dermal blood vessels were routinely positive for 67LR. We observed that the expression of the 67LR in normal human skin is mostly located in epidermal areas in which the keratinizing process was particularly advanced.
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