Alkaline Phosphatase of Cancerous Larynx Tissue in Comparison with the Placental Enzyme: Biochemical and Histochemical Studies
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.3109/02841869709109232Abstract
Tissue specimens of squamous cell carcinoma of the larynx from twenty patients were processed for histological and histopathological characterization. A histochemical study of alkaline phosphatase (ALP) was carried out using the simultaneous azo coupling method, and biochemical studies were performed using disodium phenylphosphate as substrate. Full-term, normal placentae were used for comparison. The specific activity of ALP from cancerous laryngeal tissue was 8.9 mKAU/mg protein compared with 154.7 mKAU/mg protein in the placenta. The ALP was localized histochemically in tumor cells (tumor-specific), blood vessels (vascular) and fibrous tissue (interstitial). The tumor-specific phosphatase was sensitive to inhibition by L-phenylalanine, L-leucine and to a lesser degree by L-tryptophan and levamisole. Placental ALP, on the other hand, was completely inhibited by levamisole, more resistant to leucine and more sensitive to phenylalanine and tryptophan. Biochemical estimation of ALP in cancerous laryngeal tissue combined with inhibition studies revealed that the tumor-specific activity of ALP constitutes 15% of the total ALP activity while the major isoenzyme was the vascular ALP, and around one-third of ALP activity was attributed to the interstitial enzyme. The characterization and localization of these isoenzymes are described and compared with that of the placenta. The significance and implications of the above findings are presented.