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1.
1. Cell kinetic parameters in the epidermis of partially hypophysectomized, ACTH-treated toads whose moulting frequency was increased threefold were studied using labelled thymidine and the autoradiographic technique. 2. The labelling index, length of S-phase and cycle time of stratum germinativum cells changed slowly as a function of the number of ACTH injections, and so did the migration of cells from stratum germinativum to stratum corneum. 3. A cell production in stratum germinativum of normal toads in excess of cell loss, as demonstrated by Levi & Nielsen (1982) should make it possible to maintain a status quo over a limited period of time following ablation of pars distalis and ACTH treatment.  相似文献   

2.
Acid phosphatase, non-specific esterase, alkaline phosphatase, monoamine oxidase and true lipase activities, in the epidermis of Natrix piscator in different stages of the sloughing cycle, have been localized using various histochemical techniques.
Different layers in scale epidermis have staining properties similar to corresponding layers in hinge epidermis.
Acid phosphatase and non-specific esterase activity in cell layers undergoing keratinization, and the lacunar tissue undergoing disintegration are associated with hydrolytic and catabolic wasting processes involving cell death. The activity of these enzymes in the clear layer is associated with the breaking down of the cementing substance resulting in the separation of clear layer from underlying tissue and facilitating the shedding of old slough.
Alkaline phosphatase activity in the stratum germinativum and undifferentiated epidermal cells has been associated with cell proliferation and differentiation. The presence of alkaline phosphatase in the lacunar tissue and clear layer has been correlated with the synthesis of mucopolysaccharides in these layers.
Monoamine oxidase and true lipase activity could not be located in the epidermis at any stage of the sloughing cycle.  相似文献   

3.
Following removal of the pars distalis of the pituitary gland in toads, epidermal efflux from the stratum corneum recruitment cell pool (i.e. production of corneal layers) is greatly increased. In this investigation the cell birth rate is studied by means of the metaphase arrest technique, as a function of time after pars distalis ablation. The method allows assessment of the total cell production over 14 days after the operation, to be compared with the total efflux and changes in the epidermal cell pool size. Whereas in intact toads the rate of cell production exceeds that of cell loss by moulting by a factor of 2.7, the 'surplus' of cells neither being used for formation of corneal layers nor permanently accommodated within the living epidermis, a 'balance sheet' of efflux and influx indicates that following pars distalis ablation all cells produced are also used for the (excessive) formation of corneal cell layers. The observations lend further support to the hypothesis that controlled cell deletion is a tissue homeostatic mechanism complementary to controlled cell divisions.  相似文献   

4.
This article attempts to provide a comprehensive review on the roles of various classes of molecules in the cohesion and desquamation of the stratum corneum. In the first part of this monograph we review the field of epidermal differentiation in vivo and vitro, describing the expression and functions of a number of key structural molecules that characterize the process. In the second part we emphasize terminal differentiation and the biogenesis of the stratum corneum. The stratum corneum is a cell layer unique to fully differentiated squamous epithelia such as skin. While it is a dead stratum, it nevertheless is in a homeostatic process of continual shedding and renewal in synchrony with basal cell replication. It is also a degradative layer containing many proteinases and glycosidases in which a variety of intracellular and intercellular macromolecules are degraded. We highlight the molecules localized within the intercorneal matrix that are most likely to play a role in cohesion and desquamation, including: glycoproteins, lipids and enzymes. Because it is difficult to study the stratum corneum and desquamation in the native tissue, we discuss a number of model systems that have been used. The stratum corneum can be dispersed into single squames in different ways; these include mechanical dispersion as well as agents such as detergents and enzymes. The solubilized molecules and the structures remaining can then be studied as to their specific roles in desquamation. Using this approach it is possible to reconstitute multilayered structures that resemble a real stratum corneum. We have shown that glycoproteins play a key role in squame reaggregation and that this process can be modulated with amino sugars in a lectin-like fashion. Cohesion and desquamation can also be studied in tissue culture. Depending on the culture system, the extent of terminal differentiation and squame accumulation varies. Yet desquamation does not normally occur. It can be induced however by the inclusion of exogenous agents such as IFN-gamma which are found in the native epidermis but are absent in vitro. Modulation of desquamation by other exogenous agents is likely to yield further knowledge of how shedding occurs in vivo. Insight has also come from studies of scaling skin disorders. The glycoprotein and lipid profiles are altered in the stratum corneum in many diseases of aberrant terminal differentiation. A number of abnormalities in the levels of cytokines and growth factors have also been reported in the lesional tissue of such diseases.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

5.
Interferon (IFN)-gamma has been shown to modulate cell differentiation and the expression of cell surface molecules of cultured human keratinocytes; it also induces cell shedding. We have previously described the properties of desquamin, a cell surface adhesion molecule from the stratum corneum. We report here on the impact of IFN-gamma on the expression of desquamin. We document the related morphological changes in terminal differentiation. We cultured human keratinocytes in three different culture systems: in serum-free medium at low Ca2+ (0.1 mM), at high Ca2+ (1.5 mM), and at high Ca2+ with 10% serum. IFN-gamma (100 U/ml) was added to each culture system after overnight incubation. In all cases, IFN-gamma induced an altered phenotype, as shown by phase contrast and electron microscopy. We exposed cultured cells to antibodies to the desquamins (glycoproteins from the stratum corneum). Immunoflurescent localization and Western blotting showed that the desquamins were expressed only under culture conditions where both serum and IFN-gamma were present. The induction of desquamin expression by IFN-gamma coupled with an increase in cell shedding, suggests that we have developed a suitable culture system for the study of desquamation in vitro.  相似文献   

6.
Using thin-layer chromatography and glass capillary gas-liquid chromatography, we have quantitated the lipids in the germinative, differentiating, and fully cornified layers in human epidermis. As previously noted in nonhuman species, we found progressive depletion of phospholipids coupled with repletion of sterols and sphingolipids during differentiation. The sphingolipids, present only in small quantities in the lower epidermis, accounted for about 20% of the lipid in the stratum corneum, and were the major repository for the long-chain fatty acids that predominate in the outer epidermis. Although the absolute quantities of sphingolipids increased in the outer epidermis, the glycolipid:ceramide ratio diminished in the stratum corneum, and glycolipids virtually disappeared in the outer stratum corneum. Squalene and n-alkanes were distributed evenly in all epidermal layers, suggesting that these hydrocarbons are not simply of environmental or pilosebaceous origin. Cholesterol sulfate, previously considered only a trace metabolite in epidermis, was found in significant quantities, with peak levels immediately beneath the stratum corneum in the stratum granulosum. These studies: 1) provide new quantitative data about human epidermal lipids; 2) implicate certain classes of lipids for specific functions of the stratum corneum; and, 3) shed light on possible product-precursor relationships of these lipids.  相似文献   

7.
E Fuchs  H Green 《Cell》1980,19(4):1033-1042
Cells of the inner layers of the epidermis contain small keratins (46-58K), whereas the cells of the outer layers contain large keratins (63-67K) in addition to small ones. The changes in keratin composition that take place within each cell during the course of its terminal differentiation result largely from changes in synthesis. Cultured epidermal cells resemble cells of the inner layers of the epidermis in synthesizing only small keratins. The cultured cells possess translatable mRNA only for small keratins, whereas mRNA extracted from whole epidermis can be translated into both large and small keratins. As no synthesis takes place in the outermost layer of the epidermis (stratum corneum), the keratins of this layer must be synthesized earlier, but in some cases they then become smaller: this presumably occurs by post-translational processing of the molecules during the final stages of differentiation. Stratified squamous epithelia of internal organs do not form a typical stratum corneum and do not make the large keratins characteristic of epidermis. Their keratins are also different from those of cultured keratinocytes, implying that they have embarked on an alternate route of terminal keratin synthesis.  相似文献   

8.
The adaptation to land from amphibians to amniotes was accompanied by drastic changes of the integument, some of which might be reconstructed by studying the formation of the stratum corneum during embryogenesis. As the first amniotes were reptiles, the present review focuses on past and recent information on the evolution of reptilian epidermis and the stratum corneum. We aim to generalize the discussion on the evolution of the skin in amniotes. Corneous cell envelopes were absent in fish, and first appeared in adult amphibian epidermis. Stem reptiles evolved a multilayered stratum corneum based on a programmed cell death, intensified the production of matrix proteins (e.g., HRPs), corneous cell envelope proteins (e.g., loricrine-like, sciellin-like, and transglutaminase), and complex lipids to limit water loss. Other proteins were later produced in association to the soft or hairy epidermis in therapsids (e.g., involucrin, profilaggrin-filaggrin, trichohyalin, trichocytic keratins), or to the hard keratin of hairs, quills, horns, claws (e.g., tyrosine-rich, glycine-rich, sulphur-rich matrix proteins). In sauropsids special proteins associated to hard keratinization in scales (e.g., scale beta-keratins, cytokeratin associated proteins) or feathers (feather beta-keratins and HRPs) were originated. The temporal deposition of beta-keratin in lepidosaurian reptiles originated a vertical stratified epidermis and an intraepidermal shedding layer. The evolutions of the horny layer in Therapsids (mammals) and Saurospids (reptiles and birds) are discussed. The study of the molecules involved in the dermo-epidermal interactions in reptilian skin and the molecular biology of epidermal proteins are among the most urgent future areas of research in the biology of reptilian skin.  相似文献   

9.
Morphology and ultrastructure of the skin of Lissotriton italicus (previously named Triturus italicus) have been described in different phases of its biological cycle: larval stage, metamorphic stage and adult stage with emphasis on modifications occurring between aquatic and terrestrial adults. In the present study, light microscopy and both scanning and transmission electron microscopy were employed to analyze the histological and cytological remodelling that occurs in the skin of L. italicus during metamorphosis. The ultrastructure of the larval epidermis is arranged into three principal layers comprising an external layer of pavement cells, a basal layer and 1-3 intermediate layers consisting of Leydig cells along with accessory cells and mitochondria-rich cells. By the onset of metamorphosis, morphological changes of the skin include stratification and flattening of epidermal layers and disappearance of typical larval cells. In both aquatic and terrestrial adult phases the thin, cornified epidermis shows the same general arrangement as found in other vertebrates with an external stratum corneum and a variable number of intermediate cell layers. During the terrestrial adult phase, the skin is characterized by the presence of numerous tubercles; moreover, the lower epithelium is thicker than in the aquatic phase. Ultrastructural analysis revealed no substantial differences in the cellular composition of the skin between aquatic and terrestrial phases.  相似文献   

10.
Abstract. The major histidine-rich protein (HRP) found in the stratum corneum of neonatal mouse epidermis (band 2 protein, molecular weight 27,000) is a relatively late product of epidermal differentiation and incorporates labelled amino acids in vivo only after a 6–9 h lag period. A number of putative precursor HRPs in the 70–300 K molecular weight range were initially identified using short pulse labelling times and our previously described methods for isolation of epidermis and extraction of proteins. However, when steps were taken to minimise proteolysis during preparation, a single species of approximately 350 K molecular weight was the most strongly labelled protein following a 1 h in vivo pulse of [3H]-histidine. This protein was stable in sodium dodecyl sulphate dithiothreitol at 100°C and in 4 M urea, suggesting a single covalently linked polypeptide. The kinetics of labelling and the localisation of the 350 K HRP in the lower granular layers suggest that it is a precursor of the stratum corneum HRP. The processing of the 350 K HRP to the stratum corneum species appears to involve a complex series of specific cleavage steps which give rise to a number of HRPs of intermediate molecular weight.  相似文献   

11.
Skin tissue may be engineered in a variety of ways. Our cultured skin substitute (Graftskin, living skin equivalent or G-LSE), Apligraftrade mark, is an organotypic culture of skin, containing both a "dermis" and "epidermis." The epidermis is an important functional component of skin, responsible for biologic wound closure. The epidermis possesses a stratum corneum which develops with time in culture. The stratum corneum provides barrier function properties and gives the LSE improved strength and handling characteristics. Clinical experience indicated that the stratum corneum might play an important role in improving the clinical utility of the LSE. Handling and physical characteristics improved with time in culture. We examined the LSE at different stages of epidermal maturation for barrier function and ability to persist as a graft. LSE grafted onto athymic mice before significant development of barrier function did not withstand bandage removal at 7 days postgraft. LSE grafted after barrier function had been established in vitro were able to withstand bandage removal at day 7. Corneum lipid composition and structure are critical components for barrier function. Media modifications were used in an attempt to improve the fatty acid composition of the stratum corneum. The barrier developed more rapidly and was improved in a serum-free, lipid-supplemented condition. Lipid lamellar structure was improved with 10% of the stratum corneum exhibiting broad-narrow-broad lipid lamellar arrangements similar to human skin. Fatty acid metabolism was not appreciably altered. Barrier function in vitro was 4- to 10-fold more permeable than human skin. Epidermal differentiation does not compromise engraftment or the wound healing ability of the epidermis. The stratum corneum provides features beneficial for engraftment and clinical use. (c) 1996 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.  相似文献   

12.
The nude mouse is an athymic mutant whose immunological deficiency has been exploited for transplantation of normal and diseased xenogeneic tissue. Histologically, its skin has no unusual features apart from the absence of hair. We report here a biochemical study of its epidermis, with comparison to the hairless mouse (which is devoid of hair but otherwise functionally normal). The epidermal glycoproteins were probed with the lectin, concanavalin A (Con A). Fluorescein isothiocyanate (FITC)-Con A overlays of cryostat skin sections gave a similar fluorescent pattern for both mouse strains: all the viable epidermal cell layers were labeled but not the stratum corneum. In contrast, when different populations of keratinocytes that were separated on Percoll gradients were analyzed by gel electrophoresis, and the gels then overlaid with iodinated Con A, all the epidermal layers, including the stratum corneum, were labeled. For all the epidermal cell layers there are substantial differences between the two mouse strains. We observe changes in the glycoprotein distribution with the stage of differentiation. Comparison with our earlier data for human epidermis indicates that the discrepancies between the nude mouse and the hairless mouse are much greater than those between the latter and man. The most striking difference is the absence in the stratum corneum of the nude mouse of a 40 K glycoprotein which is the dominant feature for the hairless mouse and for man. The gel patterns point to functional discrepancies in the epidermis of the nude mouse, particularly in the stratum corneum, not evident histologically or with FITC-Con A.  相似文献   

13.
Plasminogen activator enzymes have been implicated in the regulation of growth, migration, and differentiation which occur continually in normal epidermis and cyclically in the hair follicle. To elucidate further the importance of plasminogen activation in epidermal physiology, studies were conducted using mice transgenic for human plasminogen activator inhibitor 1 (PAI-1). The epidermis of the newborn (4-7 days) transgenic mice was flaky and showed delayed hair growth compared to that of their control littermates. Histologic analyses revealed a greatly thickened stratum corneum in the transgenics. By 2 weeks after birth, no differences in epidermal morphology were apparent between transgenic and control littermates. Using in situ hybridization, immunocytochemistry, and in situ reverse zymography techniques, epidermal PAI-1 expression was correlated temporally with the aberrant epidermal morphology. These data implicate plasminogen activator activity in the regulation of epidermal shedding and follicular neogenesis.  相似文献   

14.
In the ventral epidermis of fetal rats the size and distribution of intercellular gap junctions changed during differentiation. In the young fetus, between 13 and 17 days, large gap junctions sometimes exceeding 3 micron in profile length were found predominantly in basal cells. As the epidermis increased in thickness the mean profile length diminished until only small gap junctions were present mainly in more superficial layers even persisting into the stratum corneum. Endocytosis of the intercellular gap junctions gave rise to intracytoplasmic annular gap junctions (AGJs) which occurred after 17 days predominantly in the superficial three layers of the epidermis. The AGJs diminished in mean diameter with the age of the fetuses possibly as a consequence of the decreasing size of the intercellular gap junctions from which they had formed. Rarely sequestration of AGJs by cytoplasmic membranes occurred but many recognizable AGJs persisted into the stratum corneum. As in other developing systems, the function of gap junctions in epidermis is unknown but the extensive junctions of younger epidermis might be related to the maintenance of a greater level of uniformity both of mitotic activity and of differentiation.  相似文献   

15.
The primary function of the skin is to protect the body for unwanted influences from the environment. The main barrier of the skin is located in the outermost layer of the skin, the stratum corneum. The stratum corneum consists of corneocytes surrounded by lipid regions. As most drugs applied onto the skin permeate along the lipid domains, the lipid organization is considered to be very important for the skin barrier function. It is for this reason that the lipid organization has been investigated quite extensively. Due to the exceptional stratum corneum lipid composition, with long chain ceramides, free fatty acids and cholesterol as main lipid classes, the lipid organization is different from that of other biological membranes. In stratum corneum, two lamellar phases are present with repeat distances of approximately 6 and 13 nm. Moreover the lipids in the lamellar phases form predominantly crystalline lateral phases, but most probably a subpopulation of lipids forms a liquid phase. Diseased skin is often characterized by a reduced barrier function and an altered lipid composition and organization. In order to understand the aberrant lipid organization in diseased skin, information on the relation between lipid composition and organization is crucial. However, due to its complexity and inter-individual variability, the use of native stratum corneum does not allow detailed systematic studies. To circumvent this problem, mixtures prepared with stratum corneum lipids can be used. In this paper first the lipid organization in stratum corneum of normal and diseased skin is described. Then the role the various lipid classes play in stratum corneum lipid organization and barrier function has been discussed. Finally, the information on the role various lipid classes play in lipid phase behavior has been used to interpret the changes in lipid organization and barrier properties of diseased skin.  相似文献   

16.
The major histidine-rich protein (HRP) found in the stratum corneum of neonatal mouse epidermis (band 2 protein, molecular weight 27,000) is a relatively late product of epidermal differentiation and incorporates labelled amino acids in vivo only after a 6-9 h lag period. A number of putative precursor HRPs in the 70-300 K molecular weight range were initially identified using short pulse labeling times and our previously described methods for isolation of epidermis and extraction of proteins. However, when steps were taken to minimise proteolysis during preparation, a single species of approximately 350 K molecular weight was the most strongly labelled protein following a 1 h in vivo pulse of [3H]-histidine. This protein was stable in sodium dodecyl sulphate dithiothreitol at 100 degrees C and in 4 M urea, suggesting a single covalently linked polypeptide. The kinetics of labelling and the localisation of the 350 K HRP in the lower granular layers suggest that it is a precursor of the stratum corneum HRP. The processing of the 350 K HRP to the stratum corneum species appears to involve a complex series of specific cleavage steps which give rise to a number of HRPs of intermediate molecular weight.  相似文献   

17.
18.
AKT activity has been reported in the epidermis associated with keratinocyte survival and differentiation. We show in developing skin that Akt activity associates first with post-proliferative, para-basal keratinocytes and later with terminally differentiated keratinocytes that are forming the fetal stratum corneum. In adult epidermis the dominant Akt activity is in these highly differentiated granular keratinocytes, involved in stratum corneum assembly. Stratum corneum is crucial for protective barrier activity, and its formation involves complex and poorly understood processes such as nuclear dissolution, keratin filament aggregation, and assembly of a multiprotein cell cornified envelope. A key protein in these processes is filaggrin. We show that one target of Akt in granular keratinocytes is HspB1 (heat shock protein 27). Loss of epidermal HspB1 caused hyperkeratinization and misprocessing of filaggrin. Akt-mediated HspB1 phosphorylation promotes a transient interaction with filaggrin and intracellular redistribution of HspB1. This is the first demonstration of a specific interaction between HspB1 and a stratum corneum protein and indicates that HspB1 has chaperone activity during stratum corneum formation. This work demonstrates a new role for Akt in epidermis.  相似文献   

19.
The primary function of the skin is to protect the body for unwanted influences from the environment. The main barrier of the skin is located in the outermost layer of the skin, the stratum corneum. The stratum corneum consists of corneocytes surrounded by lipid regions. As most drugs applied onto the skin permeate along the lipid domains, the lipid organization is considered to be very important for the skin barrier function. It is for this reason that the lipid organization has been investigated quite extensively. Due to the exceptional stratum corneum lipid composition, with long chain ceramides, free fatty acids and cholesterol as main lipid classes, the lipid organization is different from that of other biological membranes. In stratum corneum, two lamellar phases are present with repeat distances of approximately 6 and 13 nm. Moreover the lipids in the lamellar phases form predominantly crystalline lateral phases, but most probably a subpopulation of lipids forms a liquid phase. Diseased skin is often characterized by a reduced barrier function and an altered lipid composition and organization. In order to understand the aberrant lipid organization in diseased skin, information on the relation between lipid composition and organization is crucial. However, due to its complexity and inter-individual variability, the use of native stratum corneum does not allow detailed systematic studies. To circumvent this problem, mixtures prepared with stratum corneum lipids can be used. In this paper first the lipid organization in stratum corneum of normal and diseased skin is described. Then the role the various lipid classes play in stratum corneum lipid organization and barrier function has been discussed. Finally, the information on the role various lipid classes play in lipid phase behavior has been used to interpret the changes in lipid organization and barrier properties of diseased skin.  相似文献   

20.
Lectins as Markers of Human Epidermal Cell Differentiation   总被引:7,自引:0,他引:7  
The expression of sugar residues on human epidermal cells was investigated by means of lectin binding, as a way of determining membrane structural changes occurring during the differentiation of the epidermis. Fourteen lectins of different sugar specificity were conjugated with fluorescein isothiocyanate (FITC-lectins) and tested in fluorescence microscopy on frozen sections of normal human epidermis. In parallel, FITC-lectins were tested on psoriatic-involved epidermis to visualize differences in the expression of sugar residues that might occur during abnormal epidermal differentiation. No labelling could be obtained with lectins from Bandeira simplicifolia I, Dolichos biflorus, Limulus polyhemus, Tetragonolobus purpureas, Ulex europeus I , and Triticum vulgaris (group 1 lectins). A "pemphigus-like" intercellular labelling of the whole epidermis, except the stratum corneum, was obtained with lectins from Canavalia ensiformis, Maclura pomifera, Phaseolus vulgaris , and Ricinus communis I (group 2 lectins). A selective intercellular labelling of the stratum spinosum and the stratum granulosum was seen in normal epidermis with lectins from Arachis hypogaea, Glycine max, Helix pomatia , and Sophora japonica (group 3 lectins). In psoriatic epidermis, not only the basal cell layer, but also cells from the adjacent lower stratum spinosum were found to be negative, using FITC-lectins of group 3. These data indicate that the expression of lectin binding sites in normal epidermis differs according to the maturation of the cell from the basal cell to the more mature keratinocyte in the stratum granulosum. They suggest that lectins may be used as markers of epidermal cells in various stages of normal and abnormal differentiation.  相似文献   

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