We report four patients with pseudoxanthoma elasticum-like papillary dermal elastolysis (PDE). Multiple small papules on the neck, clinically resembling pseudoxanthoma elasticum, and loss of the elastic fibre network in the papillary dermis were found in each case. Immunohistochemical staining for elastin and fibrillin-1 in one patient demonstrated the disappearance of elastin and fibrillin-1 in the papillary dermis. Site-matched normal skins of the elderly showed intact elastin but a lack of fibrillin-1 in the papillary dermis. The younger normal skins revealed intact elastin and fibrillin-1. The results suggest that fibrillin-1 is absent from the papillary dermis of the normal-appearing neck skin of the elderly and that the primary defect in PDE may be in elastin rather than in fibrillin-1.
Midkine (MK) is a retinoid-inducible and potent cell growth/differentiation factor active during mouse embryogenesis. We studied MK expression in various cell strains established from the skin. MK and its mRNA were detected in cultured keratinocytes but not in melanoma cell lines or dermal fibroblasts by both Western blot analysis and reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR). Treatment of cultured keratinocytes with retinoic acid (10(-5) M, 24 h) resulted in an increase in the level of MK mRNA. When added to cultured keratinocytes, MK stimulated cell proliferation fourfold. Immunohistochemistry revealed MK to be present at the epidermal-dermal junction in embryonic mouse skin and in normal human skin. The limited expression of MK in epidermal keratinocytes indicates that this polypeptide may be involved in the differentiation/proliferation of keratinocytes.
We detected elastin mRNA in cultured normal human keratinocytes by RNase protection assay. The content of elastin mRNA was estimated at approximately one-twentieth of that of cultured skin fibroblasts. Tropoelastin polypeptide with a molecular weight of 68 kDa was detected in the preparation of culture medium of normal human keratinocytes by western blot assays using anti-tropoelastin antibody. Immunohistochemical studies also demonstrated positive staining in cultured normal human keratinocytes as well as in skin fibroblasts. The expression of elastin by normal human keratinocytes was found to reach a maximum level at the quiescent phase of keratinocyte growth. When normal human keratinocytes were cultured on tropoelastin-coated dishes, their growth potential was greatly suppressed compared with other matrix protein-coated dishes. These results suggest that cultured normal human keratinocytes can actively synthesize elastin and that keratinocyte elastin may act as a growth-regulator for keratinocytes.
We report a case of dermatophytosis in a Judo wrestler caused by Trichophyton tonsurans (T. tonsurans) with clinical features that mimicked the concentric rings of tinea imbricata. Tinea imbricata is a unique dermatophytosis caused by Trichophyton concentricum (T. concentricum), observed endemically in subtropical to torrid zones and characterized by impressive concentric rings. We found three similar cases of the dermatophytosis in the literature that were reported as tinea pseudoimbricata or tinea indecisiva. All of these cases were associated with systemic or local immunosuppression, perhaps simulating the mechanism of tinea imbricata, which is known to involve the lack of delayed type hypersensitivity to T. concentricum. These cases imply that iatrogenic immunosuppression may perhaps play an important role in the development of the unique clinical features mimicking tinea imbricata. Furthermore, three of the four cases, including the presented case, were caused by T. tonsurans. It may be necessary to consider T. tonsurans infection when multiple concentric erythemas are encountered.
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