Artigo Revisado por pares

Abnormal maturation pathway of keratinocytes in psoriatic skin

1985; Oxford University Press; Volume: 112; Issue: 6 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1111/j.1365-2133.1985.tb02332.x

ISSN

1365-2133

Autores

Bruno Bernard, Shirley Robinson, Sylvie Vandaele, Jonathan Mansbridge, Michel Darmon,

Tópico(s)

Cellular Mechanics and Interactions

Resumo

We compared the maturation pathway of normal and psoriatic epidermis using three different markers: (1) Involucrin, which is normally detected in the stratum granulosum in normal skin, was detected in all but the basal layer of involved psoriatic skin; (2) an antigen, recognized by the murine monoclonal antibody psi 3, was present in all but the basal layer of involved psoriatic skin but was absent from uninvolved and normal skin; (3) fibronectin, which normally localizes in the dermis and the epidermal-dermal junction, was also detected intra- and extracellularly in the psoriatic epidermis. These results indicate that the alterations in keratinocyte maturation found in psoriasis do not arise from a truncation of the normal maturation pathway but rather reflect the onset of an abnormal pathway of differentiation characterized by the expression of psi 3 antigen and fibronectin and the premature appearance of involucrin.

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