VLA protein expression on epidermal cells (keratinocytes, Langerhans cells, melanocytes): a light and electron microscopic immunohistochemical study

Abstract
The very late antigens, or VLA proteins, are a family of cell surface heterodimers (alpha 1-b beta 1) that mediate cell adhesion to specific components of the extracellular matrix (collagens, fibronectin, laminin). In normal human epidermis, the common VLA beta 1 subunit is expressed on basal keratinocytes (BK). Langerhans cells (LC) and melanocytes. By means of light and electron microscopic immunostaining procedures, we have investigated the distribution of VLA alpha 1,2,3,4,6 subunits on normal human adult and foetal epidermal cells. alpha 1 antigen expression was not observed on any epidermal cell type. Both during foetal development and in adult epidermis, alpha 2 and alpha 3 were strongly expressed on the cell membrane BK, while alpha 6 was mainly expressed at their dermal pole. These different patterns of distribution suggest that the alpha 6 subunit may mediate BK anchorage to the basement membrane zone, while the alpha 2 and alpha 3 subunits may also be involved in intracellular adhesion. Moreover, with immunoelectron microscopy, LC were seen to be weakly alpha 5 and alpha 6 positive and melanocytes were alpha 3 and alpha 6 positive. Thus, VLA proteins are expressed by epidermal cells in a cell-type-specific pattern that could be related to particular functional roles of these proteins.