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Title: |
Expression and Distribution of Hyaluronic Acid and CD44
in Unphonated Human Vocal Fold Mucosa |
| Authors: |
Kiminori Sato, MD, PhD; Hirohito Umeno, MD; Tadashi Nakashima, MD;
Satoshi Nonaka, MD; Yasuaki Harabuchi, MD |
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Objectives: The tension caused by phonation (vocal fold vibration) is hypothesized to stimulate vocal fold stellate cells
(VFSCs) in the maculae flavae (MFe) to accelerate production of extracellular matrices. The distribution of hyaluronic
acid (HA) and expression of CD44 (a cell surface receptor for HA) were examined in human vocal fold mucosae (VFMe)
that had remained unphonated since birth.
Methods: Five specimens of VFMe (3 adults, 2 children) that had remained unphonated since birth were investigated
with Alcian blue staining, hyaluronidase digestion, and immunohistochemistry for CD44.
Results: The VFMe containing MFe were hypoplastic and rudimentary. The VFMe did not have a vocal ligament, Reinke’s
space, or a layered structure, and the lamina propria appeared as a uniform structure. In the children, HA was distributed
in the VFMe containing MFe. In the adults, HA had decreased in the VFMe containing MFe. In both groups, the
VFSCs in the MFe and the fibroblasts in the lamina propria expressed little CD44.
Conclusions: This study supports the hypothesis that the tensions caused by vocal fold vibration stimulate the VFSCs in
the MFe to accelerate production of extracellular matrices and form the layered structure. Phonation after birth is one of
the important factors in the growth and development of the human VFMe. (Ann Otol Rhinol Laryngol 2009;118:773-780.) |
| Keywords: |
CD44, development, growth, hyaluronic acid, macula flava, mechanotransduction, vocal fold, vocal fold
stellate cell |
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