Demonstration of skin‐derived antileukoproteinase (skalp) and its target enzyme human leukocyte elastase in squamous cell carcinoma
- 1 October 1994
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in The Journal of Pathology
- Vol. 174 (2) , 121-129
- https://doi.org/10.1002/path.1711740208
Abstract
Skin‐derived antileukoproteinase (SKALP), also known as elafin, is a strong and specific inhibitor of elastase and proteinase 3. SKALP is not present in normal epidermis, but is expressed by epidermal keratinocytes under hyperproliferative conditions such as psoriasis, wound healing, and in cell culture. In human epidermal tumours, SKALP is differentially expressed and restricted to tumours with distinct squamous differentiation. We have studied the presence of both SKALP and one of its known target enzymes, leukocyte elastase, in 41 squamous cell carcinomas of the skin. SKALP expression correlated with the degree of differentiation: strong expression was seen in well‐differentiated cells and expression was absent in poorly differentiated tumour cells. Most of the squamous cell carcinomas showed elastase‐positive cells in the tumour stroma and also within the tumour cell nests. SKALP may interfere with the proteoloytic activity of infiltrating inflammatory cells or with hitherto unknown proteinases from the tumour cells. We hypothesize that in squamous cell carcinoma progressive loss of SKALP expression could facilitate tumour spread.Keywords
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