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1.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 119(2)2022 01 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34983869

ABSTRACT

Precise information on localized variations in blood circulation holds the key for noninvasive diagnostics and therapeutic assessment of various forms of cancer. While thermal imaging by itself may provide significant insights on the combined implications of the relevant physiological parameters, viz. local blood perfusion and metabolic balance due to active tumors as well as the ambient conditions, knowledge of the tissue surface temperature alone may be somewhat inadequate in distinguishing between some ambiguous manifestations of precancer and cancerous lesions, resulting in compromise of the selectivity in detection. This, along with the lack of availability of a user-friendly and inexpensive portable device for thermal-image acquisition, blood perfusion mapping, and data integration acts as a deterrent against the emergence of an inexpensive, contact-free, and accurate in situ screening and diagnostic approach for cancer detection and management. Circumventing these constraints, here we report a portable noninvasive blood perfusion imager augmented with machine learning-based quantitative analytics for screening precancerous and cancerous traits in oral lesions, by probing the localized alterations in microcirculation. With a proven overall sensitivity >96.66% and specificity of 100% as compared to gold-standard biopsy-based tests, the method successfully classified oral cancer and precancer in a resource-limited clinical setting in a double-blinded patient trial and exhibited favorable predictive capabilities considering other complementary modes of medical image analysis as well. The method holds further potential to achieve contrast-free, accurate, and low-cost diagnosis of abnormal microvascular physiology and other clinically vulnerable conditions, when interpreted along with complementary clinically evidenced decision-making perspectives.


Subject(s)
Diagnostic Imaging/methods , Mass Screening/methods , Mouth Neoplasms/diagnostic imaging , Perfusion/methods , Adult , Aged, 80 and over , Algorithms , Biopsy , Diagnostic Imaging/instrumentation , Early Detection of Cancer , Humans , Image Processing, Computer-Assisted , Machine Learning , Male , Mass Screening/instrumentation , Middle Aged , Mouth Neoplasms/pathology , Perfusion/instrumentation , Squamous Cell Carcinoma of Head and Neck/diagnostic imaging
2.
Cell Tissue Bank ; 23(1): 157-170, 2022 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33900487

ABSTRACT

Mesenchymal stem cells (MSC) have been widely studied for tissue regeneration and cell-based therapy. MSC can be isolated from different body tissues while several biological waste sources like dental pulp, umbilical cord, cord derived blood, amniotic fluid or urine have also emerged as potential sources of MSCs. Specifically, isolation of MSCs from such non-conventional sources show promising outcomes due to the non-invasiveness of the extraction process and high proliferation capacity of the isolated MSC. However, these stem cells also exhibit the limitation of replicative senescence in long-term culture condition. Inter-cellular reactive oxygen species is an important contributor for inducing cellular senescence under long-term culture conditions. For translational application, it becomes imperative to compare the stem cells isolated from these sources for their senescence and proliferative properties. In this study, MSC were extracted from two different sources of biological waste materials-dental pulp and umbilical cord, and compared for their proliferation capacity and replicative senescence at different passage numbers (i.e. P2 and P6). Intracellular ROS production was significantly (p < 0.001) less in dental pulp stem cells culture in comparison to umbilical cord-derived stem cells at P6. The ß-gal expression also showed significantly (p < 0.001) low expression in DPSC culture compared to that of UCSC at P6. The study indicates the source of stem cells influences the proliferation capacity as well as replicative senescence of MSCs. This study will thus pave the path of future research in selecting appropriate stem cell source for regenerative medicine application.


Subject(s)
Dental Pulp , Mesenchymal Stem Cells , Cell Differentiation , Cell Proliferation , Cells, Cultured , Cellular Senescence , Stem Cells , Umbilical Cord
3.
Med Mol Morphol ; 55(1): 20-26, 2022 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34482436

ABSTRACT

This paper focuses on the status of epithelial markers, E-cadherin, and p63 in the backdrop of an abnormal amount of collagen in the sub-mucosa of dysplastic and non-dysplastic grades of OSF. Histologically confirmed OSF and normal oral mucosa samples were procured. Samples were stained by Van Gieson's stain (VG) and immunohistochemistry. The captured images were analyzed by ImageJ software to quantify their grayscale intensities. There was a gradual increase in the intensity of VG stain from normal to non-dysplastic and dysplastic OSF and the differences in their mean grayscale values were found to be significant (p < 0.00001). The intensity of E-cadherin was found to be the highest in non-dysplastic conditions and lowest in dysplastic conditions. The intensity difference of E-cadherin between normal and non-dysplastic OSF was found to be significant (p < 0.00001). The grayscale scale intensity values for p63 in whole epithelium depicted significant differences between normal and diseased conditions but for its intensity, in basal cells, significant differences were found between non-dysplastic and other classes of tissues. There was a positive correlation observed between VG and p63 staining intensity. The diseased oral epithelium demonstrated greater deposition of sub-epithelial collagen fibers along with subsequent loss of E-cadherin and an increased p63 expression.


Subject(s)
Oral Submucous Fibrosis , Antigens, CD , Cadherins/metabolism , Collagen/metabolism , Humans , Immunohistochemistry , Membrane Proteins , Mouth Mucosa/metabolism , Oral Submucous Fibrosis/metabolism , Oral Submucous Fibrosis/pathology
4.
Microsc Microanal ; 26(6): 1198-1210, 2020 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33050978

ABSTRACT

The exact process of the malignant conversion of oral submucous fibrosis (OSF) to oral cancer is not fully understood. This study aimed to detect and analyze E-cadherin expression, p63 expression, and number of mitotic figures, all correlated to cancer development, in ApoTome images of oral tissues to determine the oncogenic potentiality of OSF. ApoTome images of the study groups (6 normal, 16 OSF with dysplasia, and 10 OSF without dysplasia) were recorded. Cytoplasmic and membranous E-cadherin expression, breakages of the cell membrane, and p63 expression were detected in MATLAB 2016b. The number of mitotic figures detected by MATLAB was correlated with the number of chromosomes detected by ImageJ. A Mann­Whitney U test was done to determine a significant difference between the study groups for cytoplasmic and membranous E-cadherin distribution points. Statistical significant differences were found for cytoplasmic E-cadherin distribution between normal and OSF (with dysplasia) (p = 0.0278). There was an increase in mitotic figures, p63 expression, and cytoplasmic E-cadherin expression and a decrease in membranous E-cadherin expression from normal to diseased condition. Hence, automated detection and quantification of E-cadherin, p63, and mitotic figures in ApoTome images of oral biopsies can help in determining the oncogenic potentiality of OSF.


Subject(s)
Mouth Neoplasms , Oral Submucous Fibrosis , Biopsy , Cadherins , Cell Transformation, Neoplastic , Humans
5.
Microsc Microanal ; 25(5): 1224-1233, 2019 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31526400

ABSTRACT

Computational analysis on altered micro-nano-textural attributes of the oral mucosa may provide precise diagnostic information about oral potentially malignant disorders (OPMDs) instead of an existing handful of qualitative reports. This study evaluated micro-nano-textural features of oral epithelium from scanning electron microscopic (SEM) images and the sub-epithelial connective tissue from light microscopic (LM) and atomic force microscopic (AFM) images for normal and OPMD (namely oral sub-mucous fibrosis, i.e., OSF). Objective textural descriptors, namely discrete wavelet transform, gray-level co-occurrence matrix (GLCM), and local binary pattern (LBP), were extracted and fed to standard classifiers. Best classification accuracy of 87.28 and 93.21%; sensitivity of 93 and 96%; specificity of 80 and 91% were achieved, respectively, for SEM and AFM. In the study groups, SEM analysis showed a significant (p < 0.01) variation for all the considered textural descriptors, while for AFM, a remarkable alteration (p < 0.01) was only found in GLCM and LBP. Interestingly, sub-epithelial collagen nanoscale and microscale textural information from AFM and LM images, respectively, were complementary, namely microlevel contrast was more in normal (0.251) than OSF (0.193), while nanolevel contrast was more in OSF (0.283) than normal (0.204). This work, thus, illustrated differential micro-nano-textural attributes for oral epithelium and sub-epithelium to distinguish OPMD precisely and may be contributory in early cancer diagnostics.


Subject(s)
Image Processing, Computer-Assisted , Microscopy, Atomic Force , Microscopy, Electron, Scanning , Microscopy , Mouth Mucosa/anatomy & histology , Mouth Mucosa/pathology , Precancerous Conditions/pathology , Humans , Sensitivity and Specificity
6.
Histochem Cell Biol ; 150(1): 61-75, 2018 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29687243

ABSTRACT

Epithelial abnormality during the transformation of oral submucous fibrosis (OSF) into oral squamous cell carcinoma has been well studied and documented. However, the differential contribution of atrophy and hyperplasia for malignant potentiality of OSF is yet to be resolved. Existing diagnostic conjectures lack precise diagnostic attributes which may be effectively resolved by substantiation of specific molecular pathology signatures. Present study elucidates existence of cellular competitiveness in OSF conditions using computer-assisted neighbourhood analysis in quantitative immunohistochemistry (IHC) framework. The concept of field cancerization was contributory in finding correspondence among neighbouring cells of epithelial layers with reference to differential expression of cardinal cancer-related genes [c-Myc (oncogene), p53 (tumour suppressor), and HIF-1α (hypoxia regulator)] which are known to be important sensors in recognizing cellular competitive interface. Our analyses indicate that different states of OSF condition may be associated with different forms of competitiveness within epithelial neighbouring cells which might be responsible to shape the present and future of the pre-malignant condition. Analytical findings indicated association of atrophic epithelium with stress-driven competitive environment having low c-Myc, high-p53, and stable HIF-1α (the looser cells) which undergo apoptosis. Whereas, the cells with high c-Myc+ (winner cells) give rise to hyperplastic epithelium via possible mutation in p53. The epithelial dysplasia plausibly occurs due to clonal expansion of c-Myc and p53 positive supercompetitor cells. Present study proposes quantitative IHC along with neighbourhood analysis which might help us to dig deeper on to the interaction among epithelial cell population to provide a better understanding of field cancerization and malignant transformation of pre-malignancy.


Subject(s)
Carcinoma, Squamous Cell/pathology , Epithelium/pathology , Mouth Neoplasms/pathology , Oral Submucous Fibrosis/pathology , Disease Progression , Humans , Immunohistochemistry
7.
Future Oncol ; 13(6): 499-511, 2017 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27855516

ABSTRACT

AIM: This study aims to develop a novel noninvasive method for early cancer trend diagnosis in habitual smokers by corroborating cytomorphological and autofluorescence alterations. MATERIALS & METHODS: A total of 120 subjects were included and categorized into nonsmoker, smoker and clinically diagnosed oral potentially malignant disorder (OPMD) patients. Oral exfoliative epithelial cells were studied through differential interference contrast and fluorescence microscopy. Fuzzy trend analysis was performed using measured parameters for determining the risk factors among smokers. RESULTS: The risk assessment in this study showed a positive correlation of smoking duration with early cancer risk factors with a correlation co-efficient of 0.86. CONCLUSION: Alterations in cellular morphology and autofluorescence intensities showed positive correlation with OPMD. The present study will benefit to investigate early prediction of OPMD among susceptible individuals.


Subject(s)
Mouth Mucosa/pathology , Mouth Neoplasms/diagnosis , Mouth Neoplasms/etiology , Smoking/adverse effects , Adult , Cytarabine , Early Detection of Cancer , Female , Fuzzy Logic , Humans , Image Processing, Computer-Assisted , Male , Microscopy, Fluorescence , Middle Aged , Mouth Neoplasms/epidemiology , Precancerous Conditions/diagnosis , Precancerous Conditions/etiology , Risk Assessment
8.
Tumour Biol ; 37(9): 11861-11871, 2016 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27055661

ABSTRACT

Several studies reported that mtDNA mutations may play important roles in carcinogenesis although the mechanism is not clear yet. Most of the studies compared mtDNA sequences in a tumor with those in normal tissues from different individuals ignoring inter-individual variations. In this study, 271 SNPs, 7 novel SNPs (or SNVs), and 15 somatic mutations were detected in mtDNA of 8 oral cancer tissues with respect to reference (rCRS) and adjacent normal tissues, respectively, using Ion PGM next generation sequencing method. Most of the sequence variations (76 SNPs and 1 somatic) are present in D-loop region followed by CyB (36 SNPs), ATP6 (24 SNPs), ND5 (17 SNPs and 5 somatic), ND4 (18 coding and 2 somatic) and other non-coding and coding DNA sequences. A total of 53 and 8 non-synonymous SNPs and somatic mutations, respectively, were detected in tumor tissues and some of these variations may have deleterious effects on the protein function as predicted by bioinformatic analysis. Moreover, significantly low mtDNA contents and expression of several mitochondrial genes in tumor compared to adjacent normal tissues may have also affected mitochondrial functions. Taken together, this study suggests that mtDNA mutations as well as low expression of mtDNA coded genes may play important roles in tumor growth. Although the sample size is low, an important aspect of the study is the use of adjacent control tissues to find out somatic mutations and a change in the expression of mitochondrial genes, to rule out inter-individual and inter-tissue variations which are important issues in the study of mitochondrial genomics.


Subject(s)
DNA, Mitochondrial/genetics , Gene Expression Regulation, Neoplastic , Genetic Variation , Genome, Mitochondrial/genetics , Mitochondria/genetics , Mouth Neoplasms/genetics , Adult , Aged , DNA, Mitochondrial/chemistry , Female , Genes, Mitochondrial/genetics , Genomics/methods , High-Throughput Nucleotide Sequencing/methods , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Mitochondria/metabolism , Mitochondrial Proteins/genetics , Mouth Neoplasms/metabolism , Mouth Neoplasms/pathology , Mutation , Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide
9.
Biochem Biophys Res Commun ; 459(4): 574-8, 2015 Apr 17.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25769954

ABSTRACT

At functional levels, besides genes and proteins, changes in metabolome profiles are instructive for a biological system in health and disease including malignancy. It is understood that metabolomic alterations in association with proteomic and transcriptomic aberrations are very fundamental to unravel malignant micro-ambient criticality and oral cancer is no exception. Hence deciphering intricate dimensions of oral cancer metabolism may be contributory both for integrated appreciation of its pathogenesis and to identify any critical but yet unexplored dimension of this malignancy with high mortality rate. Although several methods do exist, NMR provides higher analytical precision in identification of cancer metabolomic signature. Present study explored abnormal signatures in choline metabolism in oral squamous cell carcinoma (OSCC) using (1)H and (13)C NMR analysis of serum. It has demonstrated down-regulation of choline with concomitant up-regulation of its break-down product in the form of trimethylamine N-oxide in OSCC compared to normal counterpart. Further, no significant change in lactate profile in OSCC possibly indicated that well-known Warburg effect was not a prominent phenomenon in such malignancy. Amongst other important metabolites, malonate has shown up-regulation but d-glucose, saturated fatty acids, acetate and threonine did not show any significant change. Analyzing these metabolomic findings present study proposed trimethyl amine N-oxide and malonate as important metabolic signature for oral cancer with no prominent Warburg effect.


Subject(s)
Carcinoma, Squamous Cell/metabolism , Choline/metabolism , Mouth Neoplasms/metabolism , Carbon-13 Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy , Humans , Proton Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy
10.
Anal Bioanal Chem ; 407(26): 7935-43, 2015 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26342309

ABSTRACT

In search of specific label-free biomarkers for differentiation of two oral lesions, namely oral leukoplakia (OLK) and oral squamous-cell carcinoma (OSCC), Fourier-transform infrared (FTIR) spectroscopy was performed on paraffin-embedded tissue sections from 47 human subjects (eight normal (NOM), 16 OLK, and 23 OSCC). Difference between mean spectra (DBMS), Mann-Whitney's U test, and forward feature selection (FFS) techniques were used for optimising spectral-marker selection. Classification of diseases was performed with linear and quadratic support vector machine (SVM) at 10-fold cross-validation, using different combinations of spectral features. It was observed that six features obtained through FFS enabled differentiation of NOM and OSCC tissue (1782, 1713, 1665, 1545, 1409, and 1161 cm(-1)) and were most significant, able to classify OLK and OSCC with 81.3 % sensitivity, 95.7 % specificity, and 89.7 % overall accuracy. The 43 spectral markers extracted through Mann-Whitney's U Test were the least significant when quadratic SVM was used. Considering the high sensitivity and specificity of the FFS technique, extracting only six spectral biomarkers was thus most useful for diagnosis of OLK and OSCC, and to overcome inter and intra-observer variability experienced in diagnostic best-practice histopathological procedure. By considering the biochemical assignment of these six spectral signatures, this work also revealed altered glycogen and keratin content in histological sections which could able to discriminate OLK and OSCC. The method was validated through spectral selection by the DBMS technique. Thus this method has potential for diagnostic cost minimisation for oral lesions by label-free biomarker identification.


Subject(s)
Carcinoma, Squamous Cell/diagnosis , Leukoplakia, Oral/diagnosis , Mouth Neoplasms/diagnosis , Mouth/pathology , Spectroscopy, Fourier Transform Infrared/methods , Biomarkers, Tumor/analysis , Humans , Sensitivity and Specificity , Support Vector Machine
11.
Sci Rep ; 14(1): 10524, 2024 05 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38719976

ABSTRACT

Extracellular matrix diseases like fibrosis are elusive to diagnose early on, to avoid complete loss of organ function or even cancer progression, making early diagnosis crucial. Imaging the matrix densities of proteins like collagen in fixed tissue sections with suitable stains and labels is a standard for diagnosis and staging. However, fine changes in matrix density are difficult to realize by conventional histological staining and microscopy as the matrix fibrils are finer than the resolving capacity of these microscopes. The dyes further blur the outline of the matrix and add a background that bottlenecks high-precision early diagnosis of matrix diseases. Here we demonstrate the multiple signal classification method-MUSICAL-otherwise a computational super-resolution microscopy technique to precisely estimate matrix density in fixed tissue sections using fibril autofluorescence with image stacks acquired on a conventional epifluorescence microscope. We validated the diagnostic and staging performance of the method in extracted collagen fibrils, mouse skin during repair, and pre-cancers in human oral mucosa. The method enables early high-precision label-free diagnosis of matrix-associated fibrotic diseases without needing additional infrastructure or rigorous clinical training.


Subject(s)
Microscopy, Fluorescence , Animals , Mice , Humans , Microscopy, Fluorescence/methods , Extracellular Matrix Proteins/metabolism , Optical Imaging/methods , Extracellular Matrix/metabolism , Collagen/metabolism , Mouth Mucosa/metabolism , Mouth Mucosa/pathology , Skin/metabolism , Skin/pathology
12.
Exp Mol Pathol ; 95(3): 259-69, 2013 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23994666

ABSTRACT

Evaluating molecular attributes in association with its epithelial and sub-epithelial changes of oral sub-mucous fibrosis is meaningful in exploring the plausibility of an epithelio-mesenchymal transition (EMT) and malignant potentiality of this pathosis. In this study histopathological and histochemical attributes for basement membrane and connective tissue in biopsies of oral sub-mucous fibrosis (n = 55) and normal oral mucosa (n = 16) were assessed and expressions of p63, E-cadherin, ß-catenin, N-cadherin and TWIST were analyzed immunohistochemically. The p63 and its isoforms (TA and ∆N), PARD3, E-cadherin and ß-catenin were also assessed transcriptomically by q-PCR and EMT players like TWIST1, ZEB1, MMP9 and micro-RNA 205 were searched in gene expression microarrays. Oral epithelium demonstrating impairment in progressive maturation in oral sub-mucous fibrosis concomitantly experienced an increase in basement membrane thickness and collagen deposition along with alteration in target molecular expressions. In comparison to non-dysplastic conditions dysplastic stages exhibited significant increase in p63 and p63∆N expressions whereas, E-cadherin and ß-catenin exhibited loss from the membrane with concurrent increase in cytoplasm. Further the N-cadherin and TWIST were gained remarkably along with the appearance of nuclear accumulation features of ß-catenin. The microarray search had noticed the up-regulation of TWIST1, ZEB1 and MMP9 along with down regulation of micro-RNA 205. The simultaneous increase in basement membrane thickness and sub-epithelial collagen deposition were the plausible indicators for increased matrix stiffness with expected impact on oral epithelial functional homoeostasis. This was corroborated with the increase in expressions of epithelial master regulator p63 and its oncogenic isoform (∆N) along with membranous loss of E-cadherin (EMT hallmark) and its associate ß-catein and gain of mesenchymal markers like N-cadherin and TWIST. These also became indicative for the induction of epithelial to mesenchymal transitional mechanism in oral sub-mucous fibrosis when connoted here with the relevant modulation in expressions of EMT regulators.


Subject(s)
Biomarkers/metabolism , Epithelial-Mesenchymal Transition , Homeodomain Proteins/metabolism , Matrix Metalloproteinase 9/metabolism , MicroRNAs/genetics , Mouth Mucosa/metabolism , Nuclear Proteins/metabolism , Oral Submucous Fibrosis/pathology , Transcription Factors/metabolism , Twist-Related Protein 1/metabolism , Case-Control Studies , Gene Expression Profiling , Gene Expression Regulation, Neoplastic , Homeodomain Proteins/genetics , Humans , Immunoenzyme Techniques , Matrix Metalloproteinase 9/genetics , Middle Aged , Nuclear Proteins/genetics , Oligonucleotide Array Sequence Analysis , Oral Submucous Fibrosis/genetics , Oral Submucous Fibrosis/metabolism , RNA, Messenger/genetics , Real-Time Polymerase Chain Reaction , Reverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain Reaction , Transcription Factors/genetics , Twist-Related Protein 1/genetics , Zinc Finger E-box-Binding Homeobox 1
13.
Med Eng Phys ; 111: 103941, 2023 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36792242

ABSTRACT

Mandibles with odontogenic tumors are often partially reconstructed with a metallic bone graft analogue with dental roots, crowns, along with a customized plate fixed with monocortical or bicortical screws, following resection of the tumor. In this study, two different designs of patient specific customized Ti reconstruction plates, solid and plate with holes, were considered. Fixation through both bicortical and monocortical screw types were investigated. FE models of the reconstructed mandibles were developed to analyse the influence of the plate-screw type combination on the load transfer across the mandibles under a mastication cycle. The effective homogenized orthotropic material properties of the lattice structures with 0.6 mm fibre diameter with 0.5 mm inter-fibre space were assigned to material properties for the bone graft analogue. The study shows that the combination of plate and screw types influences the state of stresses in the reconstructed mandible. Based on the results of this patient specific study, following resection of the tumor, either solid Ti plate with bicortical screws or Ti plate with holes along with monocortical screws may be used for partial mandibulectomy. It should also be noted that stresses in none of the plates or screws exceeded the yield limit for Ti under the mastication cycle indicating that the components are safe for mandibular reconstruction. However, the choice of this combination of reconstruction plates and screws is dependant on the condition and severity of the tumor in the diseased mandible.


Subject(s)
Mandibular Reconstruction , Plastic Surgery Procedures , Humans , Mandibular Reconstruction/methods , Bone Screws , Bone Transplantation , Mandible/surgery , Bone Plates , Biomechanical Phenomena
14.
Eur J Cell Biol ; 100(1): 151146, 2021 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33418093

ABSTRACT

Oral sub-mucous fibrosis (OSF) is a pathophysiological state of oral cavity or oropharynx having a high chance of conversion to oral squamous cell carcinoma (OSCC). It involves fibrotic transformation of sub-epithelial matrix along with epithelial abnormalities. The present work aims to unveil the mechanistic domain regarding OSF to OSCC conversion exploring the scenario of hypoxia associated oxidative stress, epithelial-mesenchymal transition (EMT), metastasis and stemness acquisition. The study involves histopathological analysis of the diseased condition along with the exploration of oxidative stress status, assessment of mitochondrial condition, immunohistochemical analysis of HIF-1α, E-cadherin, vimentin, ERK, ALDH-1, CD133, Shh, Gli-1 and survivin expressions in the oral epithelial region together with the quantitative approach towards collagen deposition in the sub-epithelial matrix. Oxidative stress was found to be associated with type-II EMT in case of OSF attributing the development of sub-epithelial fibrosis and type-III EMT in case of OSCC favoring malignancy associated metastasis. Moreover, the acquisition of stemness during OSCC can also be correlated with EMT. Alteration of Shh and Gli-1 expression pattern revealed the mechanistic association of hypoxia with the phenotypic plasticity and disease manifestation in case of OSF as well as OSCC. Shh/ Gli-1 signaling can also be correlated with survivin mediated cytoprotective phenomenon under oxidative stress. Overall, the study established the correlative network of hypoxia associated oxidative stress, EMT and manifestation of oral pre-cancerous and cancerous condition in a holistic approach that may throw rays of hope in the therapeutic domain of the concerned diseases.


Subject(s)
Carcinoma, Squamous Cell/physiopathology , Cell Hypoxia/physiology , Fibrosis/physiopathology , Hedgehog Proteins/metabolism , Mouth Neoplasms/physiopathology , Epithelial-Mesenchymal Transition , Humans , Oxidative Stress
15.
Biomolecules ; 11(6)2021 06 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34203873

ABSTRACT

The choice of tissue fixation is critical for preserving the morphology and biochemical information of tissues. Fragile oral tissues with lower tensile strength are challenging to process for histological applications as they are prone to processing damage, such as tissue tear, wrinkling, and tissue fall-off from slides. This leads to loss of morphological information and unnecessary delay in experimentation. In this study, we have characterized the new PAXgene tissue fixation system on oral buccal mucosal tissue of cancerous and normal pathology for routine histological and immunohistochemical applications. We aimed to minimize the processing damage of tissues and improve the quality of histological experiments. We also examined the preservation of biomolecules by PAXgene fixation using FTIR microspectroscopy. Our results demonstrate that the PAXgene-fixed tissues showed significantly less tissue fall-off from slides. Hematoxylin and Eosin staining showed comparable morphology between formalin-fixed and PAXgene-fixed tissues. Good quality and slightly superior immunostaining for cancer-associated proteins p53 and CK5/6 were observed in PAXgene-fixed tissues without antigen retrieval than formalin-fixed tissues. Further, FTIR measurements revealed superior preservation of glycogen, fatty acids, and amide III protein secondary structures in PAXgene-fixed tissues. Overall, we present the first comprehensive evaluation of the PAXgene tissue fixation system in oral tissues. This study concludes that the PAXgene tissue fixation system can be applied to oral tissues to perform diagnostic molecular pathology experiments without compromising the quality of the morphology or biochemistry of biomolecules.


Subject(s)
Mouth Neoplasms , Neoplasm Proteins , Squamous Cell Carcinoma of Head and Neck , Tissue Fixation , Female , Humans , Immunohistochemistry , Male , Mouth Neoplasms/diagnosis , Mouth Neoplasms/genetics , Mouth Neoplasms/metabolism , Mouth Neoplasms/pathology , Neoplasm Proteins/chemistry , Neoplasm Proteins/genetics , Neoplasm Proteins/metabolism , Spectroscopy, Fourier Transform Infrared , Squamous Cell Carcinoma of Head and Neck/diagnosis , Squamous Cell Carcinoma of Head and Neck/genetics , Squamous Cell Carcinoma of Head and Neck/metabolism , Squamous Cell Carcinoma of Head and Neck/pathology
16.
IEEE J Biomed Health Inform ; 25(1): 152-162, 2021 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32750913

ABSTRACT

Bright-field microscopy (BFM) encrypts the optical transillumination profile of the transmitted light attenuated by the complex micro-structural tissue convolutions, manifested by the dense and compact regions of the specimen under examination. The connotations of idiosyncratic tissue interaction dynamics with the onset of pre-cancerous activity are encoded in the BFM acquired oral mucosa histopathological images (OMHI). In the present study, our analysis is focused on the sub-epithelium region of the oral mucosa, which has high clinical significance but sparsely explored in the literature from the textural domain. Histopathology being the gold-standard technique till date, we have used the light microscopic histopathology images for tissue characterization. The tissue-index transmission patches (TITP) from the sub-epithelium region are cropped under the guidance of oral onco-pathologists. After that, the TITPs are characterized for its multi-scale spatial-deformation dynamics, while keeping the intrinsic anisotropic geometry, and local contour connectivity within tolerable limits. With recent studies exhibiting multifractal's potency in diverse biological system analysis, here, we exploit the 2D multifractal detrended fluctuation analysis (2D-MFDFA) on TITPs for exploring a discriminative set of multifractal signatures for healthy, oral potentially malignant disorders and oral cancer tissue sample. The predictive model's competency is validated on an experimentally collected corpus of TITP samples and substantiated via confirmatory data statistics and analysis, showing its inter-class segregation efficacy. Moreover, the 2D-MFDFA analysis evinces the complex multifractal patterns in TITPs, which is due to the presence of composite long-range correlations in the oral mucosa tissue fabric.


Subject(s)
Mouth Mucosa , Neoplasms , Connective Tissue , Epithelium , Humans , Microscopy
17.
J Oral Maxillofac Pathol ; 24(1): 188, 2020.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32508480

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: In the context of early diagnosis and prevention of oral cancer, precise assessment of malignant potentiality of the oral potentially malignant disorders, particularly oral submucous fibrosis (OSF) is crucial. Till date, the assessment of malignant potentiality suffers from predictive ambiguity due to the lack of precision in the gold standard techniques. This can be addressed by integrating heuristic domain knowledge with quantitative analysis. AIM: The aim of this study is to propose an index for enhancing accuracy in malignant potentiality evaluation. MATERIALS AND METHODS: The present study analyzes important histomorphometric attributes (epithelial thickness, basal cell nuclear size, nuclear-to-cytoplasmic area ratio of basal cells, chromaticity of basal cell nucleus, thickness of basement membrane, ratio of vasculature in juxta-epithelial connective tissue [i.e., area covered by blood vessels/total area], collagen density in the lamina propria) of oral mucosa in dysplastic and nondysplastic OSF in association with relevant oncopathological appreciations (weightage of different features as suggested by oral pathologists) toward proposing a "Malignant Potentiality Index" (MPI). RESULTS: Analysis of variance and notch box plot analysis depict statistically significant differences (P < 0.0001) in the histopathological features among different study groups (normal oral mucosa, OSF without dysplasia, OSF with dysplasia). Histopathological observation of one OSF patient with calculated MPI is shown. CONCLUSION: This newly proposed diagnostic cum prognostic decision-making parameter, the "MPI" may bring a value addition to the conventional diagnostic gold standard.

18.
Proc Inst Mech Eng H ; 234(5): 486-495, 2020 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32022650

ABSTRACT

The extent to which load transfer in a diseased mandible with odontogenic tumour might influence the potential risk of pathological fracture has scarcely been investigated. The study sought to investigate the quantitative deviations in load transfer across healthy and cancer-affected (diseased) mandibles having odontogenic tumours. The effect of size of the tumours (small: 9 mm diameter, large: 19 mm diameter), and variation in bone mechanical (elastic) properties of the mandible on load transfer in cancer-affected mandibles during a mastication cycle have been investigated. Based on patient-specific computed tomography-scan datasets, detailed three-dimensional finite element models of healthy and diseased mandibles were developed. High stresses of 25-30 MPa and strains ∼700 µÎµ were observed in the healthy mandible during the right molar bite. However, marginal deviations were observed in principal stress distributions in the diseased mandibles with small- and large-sized tumours, as compared to the healthy mandible. Maximum principal strains of ∼1474 µÎµ were found in the body region adjacent to the symphysis region for small-sized tumour. Whereas for large-sized tumour, maximum strains of ∼2700 µÎµ were observed in the right buccal regions. Reduction in Young's modulus due to different stages of odontogenic tumours had a localised effect on the principal stress distributions, but triggered an abrupt increase in the principal tensile strains. It appears that there is a potential risk of pathological fracture for large-sized odontogenic tumour, owing to high tensile stresses and strains.


Subject(s)
Mandible/physiopathology , Mastication , Odontogenic Tumors/physiopathology , Biomechanical Phenomena , Finite Element Analysis , Humans , Jaw/physiopathology , Stress, Mechanical , Weight-Bearing
19.
Tissue Cell ; 59: 82-87, 2019 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31383292

ABSTRACT

Abnormal epithelial stratification is a sign of oral dysplasia and hence evaluation of surface characteristics of oral epithelial region can help in detection of cancerous progression. Surface characteristics can be better visualised by Scanning Electron Microscopy (SEM) in comparison to light microscopy. In our study we have developed automated image processing algorithms i.e. Gaussian with median filtering and Gradient filtering, using MATLAB 2016b, to segment the surface characteristics i.e. the ridges and pits in the SEM images of oral tissue of normal (13 samples) and Oral Submucous Fibrosis (OSF) (36 samples) subjects. After segmentation, quantitative measurement of the parameters like area, thickness and textural features like entropy, contrast and range filter of ridges as well as area of pit and the ratio of area of ridge vs. area of pit was done. Statistical significant differences were obtained in between normal and OSF study groups for thickness (p=0.0107), entropy (p<0.00001) and contrast of ridge (p<0.00001) for Gaussian with median filtering and for all the parameters except thickness of the ridge(p=1.386), for Gradient filtering. Thus, computer aided image processing by Gradient filter followed by quantitative measurement of the surface characteristics provided precise differentiation between normal and precancerous oral condition.


Subject(s)
Algorithms , Image Processing, Computer-Assisted , Microscopy, Electron, Scanning , Mouth Mucosa , Mouth Neoplasms , Oral Submucous Fibrosis , Precancerous Conditions , Adult , Aged , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Mouth Mucosa/metabolism , Mouth Mucosa/ultrastructure , Mouth Neoplasms/metabolism , Mouth Neoplasms/ultrastructure , Oral Submucous Fibrosis/metabolism , Oral Submucous Fibrosis/pathology , Precancerous Conditions/metabolism , Precancerous Conditions/pathology
20.
Tissue Cell ; 40(6): 425-35, 2008 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18573513

ABSTRACT

Oral submucous fibrosis (OSF) is a precancerous condition of the oral cavity and oropharynx and a significant number of such cases transform into oral squamous cell carcinoma (OSCC). Presently, diagnosis of OSF is done mainly through qualitative histopathological techniques and in the level of diagnostic molecular biology no specific genetic marker is evident. Keeping these facts in mind this study evaluates histopathological changes in the epithelium and subepithelial connective tissue of OSF through quantitative digital image analysis in respect to specific candidate features and analyses null mutations in the GSTM1 and GSTT1 by PCR amplification. The analysis revealed that there are subtle quantitative differences in the histological images of OSF compared to NOM. The thickness of the epithelium and cell population in its different zones, radius of curvature of rete-ridges and connective tissue papillae were decreased but length of rete-ridges and connective tissue papillae, fibrocity and the number of cellular components (predominantly inflammatory cells) in the subepithelial connective tissue were increased in OSF. The PCR study revealed that there is no significant difference in the allelic variants in GSTM1 between OSF and normal, while GSTT1 null gene showed significantly higher frequencies in this precancerous condition. This study establishes a distinct quantitative difference between normal oral mucosa (NOM) and OSF in respect to their histological features and GST null gene frequencies.


Subject(s)
Glutathione Transferase/genetics , Models, Biological , Precancerous Conditions/metabolism , Precancerous Conditions/pathology , Adult , Algorithms , Biomarkers, Tumor/genetics , Biomarkers, Tumor/metabolism , Carcinoma, Squamous Cell/genetics , Carcinoma, Squamous Cell/metabolism , Carcinoma, Squamous Cell/pathology , Disease Progression , Epithelial Cells/metabolism , Epithelial Cells/pathology , Fibrosis , Gene Expression Regulation, Neoplastic , Genetic Predisposition to Disease , Genotype , Glutathione Transferase/metabolism , Humans , Image Processing, Computer-Assisted , Middle Aged , Mouth Mucosa/metabolism , Mouth Mucosa/pathology , Mouth Neoplasms/genetics , Mouth Neoplasms/metabolism , Mouth Neoplasms/pathology , Precancerous Conditions/genetics
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