Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0851184 (thinning)
11,252 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The aim of the present study was to investigate the response of normal human skin to repeated courses of Sellotape stripping. The skin of healthy volunteers was stripped five times at 24-h intervals. Skin biopsies were taken before stripping (day 0) and on days 2, 4, 7 and 10. The responses were studied using H & E staining and an immunohistochemical analysis of several aspects of epidermal proliferation and keratinization. Although increased proliferation (nuclear binding to Ki-67 binding), acanthosis and parakeratosis were observed, the overall histological picture did not resemble psoriatic histology completely: no micropustules of Kogoj and no thinning of the suprapapillary plate were observed. Involucrin staining followed the recruitment of cycling epidermal cells showing a statistically significant elevation of positive cell layers from day 2 onwards. Filaggrin expression showed an increase from day 2 onwards, which was statistically significant on day 7 and day 10. Using the anti-keratin antibodies KS8.12 (K13 and K16) and RKSE60 (K10) we observed a fast induction of K13/K16 expression, while the staining of keratin 10 showed the same overall intensity at different time intervals. In conclusion, the response to repeated courses of tape stripping provides an adequate model for studies on epidermal proliferation, hypergranulosis and hyperkeratosis. This approach causes a more prolonged induction of these phenomena than a single course of stripping. In contrast to the situation following a single course of stripping, repeated tape stripping induced the expression of filagrin. Therefore the repeated tape stripping model is less compatible with psoriasis than a single course of stripping.
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PMID:Repeated tape stripping of normal skin: a histological assessment and comparison with events seen in psoriasis. 753 89

In prostanoid biosynthesis, the first two steps are catalyzed by cyclooxygenases (COX). In mice and humans, deregulated expression of COX-2, but not of COX-1, is characteristic of epithelial tumors, including squamous cell carcinomas of skin. To explore the function of COX-2 in epidermis, a keratin 5 promoter was used to direct COX-2 expression to the basal cells of interfollicular epidermis and the pilosebaceous appendage of transgenic mouse skin. COX-2 overexpression in the expected locations, resulting in increased prostaglandin levels in epidermis and plasma, correlated with a pronounced skin phenotype. Heterozygous transgenic mice exhibited a reduced hair follicle density. Moreover, postnatally hair follicle morphogenesis and thinning of interfollicular dorsal epidermis were delayed. Adult transgenics showed a body-site-dependent sparse coat of greasy hair, the latter caused by sebaceous gland hyperplasia and increased epicutaneous sebum levels. In tail skin, hyperplasia of scale epidermis reflecting an increased number of viable and cornified cell layers was observed. Hyperplasia was a result of a disturbed program of epidermal differentiation rather than an increased proliferation rate, as reflected by the strong suppression of keratin 10, involucrin, and loricrin expression in suprabasal cells. Further pathological signs were loss of cell polarity, mainly of basal keratinocytes, epidermal invaginations into the dermis, and formation of horn perls. Invaginating hyperplastic lobes were surrounded by CD31-positive vessels. These results demonstrate a causal relationship between transgenic COX-2 expression in basal keratinocytes and epidermal hyperplasia as well as dysplastic features at discrete body sites.
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PMID:Abnormal differentiation of epidermis in transgenic mice constitutively expressing cyclooxygenase-2 in skin. 1138 Nov 42