Ockleford, C D and Smith, R K and Byrne, S and Sanders, R and Bosio, P (2004) Confocal laser scanning microscope study of cytokeratin immunofluorescence differences between villous and extravillous trophoblast: Cytokeratin downregulation in pre-eclampsia. Microscopy Research and Technique, 64 (1). pp. 43-53. ISSN 1059-910X
Full text not available from this repository.Abstract
Pre-eclampsia is a disease characterized by failures in interstitial implantation. One product of the implantation process is the basal plate; a structure whose complexity makes it hard to fully appreciate the pathological changes in significant diseases of pregnancy. This article describes our use of CLSM immunofluorescence to examine the cytokeratin composition of the cells of trophoblastic origin in the term placental basal plate. Large differences in the content of the structural polymeric protein were compared using analysis of digital images. We show that greater pancytokeratin immunofluorescence is observed in extravillous cytotrophoblast cells as compared with villous trophoblast. There is a > 30-fold difference in the mean area percent of the most intensely immunofluorescent pixels in the tissue containing these cells. This is a very high, statistically significant difference as defined by the Wilcoxon Signed Ranks Test Asym. Sig. (two-tailed): P < 0.001. The most invasive population of cells of the trophoblast lineage (the extravillous trophoblast) exhibits a significant reduction in cytokeratin immunofluorescence when comparisons of healthy and pre-eclamptic pregnancies are made. This ratio was 2.4:1. It was tested using the Mann-Whitney U-test. From healthy to pre-eclamptic the reduction was from mean rank 83.42((healthy)) to 51.13((pre-eclamptic)). The difference was very highly statistically significant (n = 53 + 75 = 128; U = 984.500; Z = -4.852; P < 0.001). There was also less cytokeratin-related immunofluorescence in villous trophoblast when healthy villi were compared with pre-eclamptic villi. The observed alterations in trophoblastic cytoskeletal components are expected to damage the anchorage and motility of cells. The extravillous trophoblast is known to be necessary for implantation. This leads to a cellular hypothesis of the failure of implantation resulting in reduced depth of uterine invasion and failure to adapt the spiral arterioles for low-pressure perfusion of the intervillus space, two well-known features of pre-eclampsia. The reduction in cytokeratin-related immunofluorescence in the villus trophoblast seen on comparing healthy term placentae with those from pre-eclamptics implies that the trophoblast is a weaker epithelial layer in the hypertensive pregnancy. This could account for the rise in deported trophoblast associated with pre-eclampsia. Deported trophoblast has been invoked as the systemic messenger that leads to generalized maternal hypertension seen in this condition. (C) 2004 Wiley-Liss, Inc.