Cortactin Localization in Actin-containing Adult and Fetal tissuesHong Wua and Kathleen T. Montoneaa Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine, Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Correspondence to: Hong Wu, 6 Founders Pavilion, 3400 Spruce Street, Philadelphia, PA 19104..
Cortactin is a tyrosine kinase substrate that binds to filamentous actin. It represents a highly conserved family of perimembrane signaling proteins. The human homologue of cortactin is encoded by gene EMS1, which is amplified in some human breast, head, and neck carcinomas. This study shows that cortactin is preferentially localized to the apical surfaces of the polarized epithelium, specifically, to the terminal web of small bowel epithelium and to apical surfaces of the proximal renal tubules, thyroid follicles, and bronchiolar epithelium. Cortactin is also seen in cell and tissue types with actin-based contractile capacities, including smooth and striated muscle and myoepithelium. (J Histochem Cytochem 46:11891191, 1998) Key Words: cortactin, human tissue distribution, tyrosine kinase substrate, actin binding protein, apical surfaces, polarized epithelium, endothelium, muscle
CORTACTIN, which represents two related cellular proteins p80 and p85, was originally identified as a substrate for activated pp60src protein tyrosine kinase in Rous sarcoma virus-transformed chicken embryo cells (
This study aimed at a systematic characterization of the expression pattern of cortactin in normal human tissues. Immunohistochemical studies were performed on formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded normal adult and fetal tissues. Staining was carried out using manual capillary action technology as previously described (
Anti-cortactin MAb 4F11 exhibited specific staining patterns in a variety of normal adult and fetal human tissues. In the small bowel, anti-cortactin MAb showed strong staining of the brush border. The staining was especially concentrated at the terminal web of the brush border microvilli (Figure 1A). In contrast, the cell body and the basal and lateral cell surfaces showed no significant staining. In the proximal renal tubules, anti-cortactin MAb also stained the brush border. Interestingly, in the collecting ducts, cortactin was detected only in occasional enlarged cells that were morphologically consistent with the intercalated cells which have microvilli. A similar apical surface staining was also observed in fetal thyroid follicles, which are known to have many microvilli (
The apical staining pattern in the tissues correlates very well with the localization of cortactin in cultured cells, which show an enrichment of the protein in actin-based surface projections, including the membrane ruffles and filopodia of migrating cells and cellsubstratum adhesion sites of adherent cells (
Similar to the report by
The tissue reactivity of MAb 4F11 seen in the current immunohistochemical study is specific for cortactin. MAb 4F11 shows no crossreactivity with other protein species (
We are grateful to Dr J. Thomas Parsons and his laboratory (Department of Microbiology, University of Virginia) for kindly providing the monoclonal antibodies 4F11 and 1H3. We thank Ms Yunrui Du (University of Virginia) for critical review of the manuscript. Received for publication May 13, 1998; accepted May 26, 1998.
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