The ultrastructure of conjunctival melanocytic tumors.
- 1 January 1984
- journal article
- research article
- Vol. 82, 599-752
Abstract
The ultrastructure of conjunctival melanocytic lesions in 49 patients was evaluated to find significant differences between benign and malignant cells. The patients studied included 9 with benign epithelial (racial) melanosis, 2 with pigmented squamous cell papillomas, 16 with conjunctival nevi, 18 with primary acquired melanosis, and 11 with invasive nodules of malignant melanoma. In benign epithelial melanosis, dendritic melanocytes were situated along the basement membrane region of the conjunctival epithelium, with one basilar dendritic melanocyte lodged among every five or six basilar keratinocytes. The dendritic melanocytes extended arborizing cellular processes between the basilar and among the suprabasilar keratinocytes, which manifested considerable uptake of melanin granules into their cytoplasm. The benign dendritic melanocytes possessed nuclei with clumped heterochromatin at the nuclear membrane, small, tightly wound nucleoli, and large, elongated, fully melaninized melanin granules. In two patients with benign hyperplasia of the dendritic melanocytes, occasional dendritic melanocytes were located in a suprabasilar position, but were always separated from each other by keratinocytes or their processes. In the two black patients with benign pigmented squamous papillomas, the benign dendritic melanocytes were located hapharzardly at all levels of the acanthotic epithelium and not just along the basement membrane region. Melanin uptake by the proliferating keratinocytes was minimal. In benign melanocytic nevi of the conjunctiva, nevus cells within the intraepithelial junctional nests displayed a more rounded cellular configuration; short villi and broader cellular processes suggestive of abortive dendrites were found. The nuclear chromatin pattern was clumped at the nuclear membrane, but the nucleoli were somewhat larger than those of benign dendritic melanocytes in epithelial melanosis. The melanosomes were smaller and rounder than those in dendritic melanocytes and exhibited more haphazard arrangements of the melanofilaments, which were only partially melaninized. Mitochondria were more numerous than in dendritic melanocytes, and monoribosomes predominated over polyribosomes. Cytoplasmic filaments were inconspicuous. Cells in the immediate subepithelial connective tissue zone had features identical to those of the cells within the junctional nests. Smaller, lymphocytoid cells with less numerous and more rudimentary melanosomes were found in the middle and deeper portions of the lesions.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)This publication has 97 references indexed in Scilit:
- Neoplasms arising in congenital giant neviThe American Journal of Surgical Pathology, 1981
- Congenital nevocytic nevi and malignant melanomasJournal of the American Academy of Dermatology, 1979
- A Tridimensional View of Intradermal Nevi as Revealed by Scanning Electron MicroscopyJournal of Cutaneous Pathology, 1979
- Age-related changes in melanocytic naeviClinical and Experimental Dermatology, 1979
- Cellular fine structure in the invasive nodules of different histogenetic types of malignant melanomaBritish Journal of Dermatology, 1978
- The ultrastructure of benign pigmented naevi and melanocarcinomas in manThe Journal of Pathology, 1976
- Some Aspects Of Melanin Biology: 1950–1975Journal of Investigative Dermatology, 1976
- The giant melanosome: A model of deranged melanosome-morphogenesisJournal of Ultrastructure Research, 1974
- Melanin Transfer: A Possible Phagocytic Process*Journal of Investigative Dermatology, 1967
- Melanocyte Populations in UV-irradiated Human Skin**From the Division of Biological and Medical Sciences, Brown University, Providence, R.I., the Department of Dermatology, Harvard Medical School, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, Mass. and the Rhode Island Medical Center, Howard, R.I.Journal of Investigative Dermatology, 1965