Carlson J Andrew, Grabowski Richard, Mu Xiao C, Del Rosario Arthur, Malfetano John, Slominski Andrzej
Department of Pathology, Albany Medical College, New York 12208, USA.
Am J Dermatopathol. 2002 Apr;24(2):97-107. doi: 10.1097/00000372-200204000-00001.
Lichen sclerosus (LS) shares with vitiligo a milky-white appearance. By biopsy, pathognomonic dermal sclerosis readily distinguishes LS from vitiligo and other causes of leukoderma. To determine what the mechanism of hypopigmentation is in LS, we examined samples from LS cases for alterations in melanin content (Fontana-Masson stain) and melanocyte number (HMB-45 [PMEL-17/gp100], Mel-5 [TRP-1], Mart-1 [Melan A]) and compared these findings with those in controls of normal skin, acute scars, vitiligo, and lichen planus (LP; a common inflammatory cause of hyperpigmentation). The degree and extent of melanization found in LS overlapped with that in acute scars showing predominantly hypomelanized keratinocytes, with that in LP containing regions with numerous melanophages, and with that in vitiligo exhibiting focal regions of keratinocytes devoid of melanin pigment. By hematoxylin-eosin staining and immunocytochemistry for Mel-5 and Mart-1, LS had a lower mean count of melanocytes than acute scars, LP, and normal skin per 200 basal keratinocytes. In addition, a few LS cases had a significant loss of melanocytes comparable to that of vitiligo. Surprisingly, Mart-1 identified rare melanocytes in 67% of vitiligo cases and a significantly larger pool of melanocytes in LS and controls other than those labeled by Mel-5. Furthermore, LP and evolving lesions of LS contained the highest Mart-1 counts. HMB-45-immunoreactive melanocytes were found in the majority of acute scars and in LP and late-stage LS lesions at significantly lower levels than Mel-5- and Mart-1- labeled melanocytes, but they were not found in vitiligo or normal skin. We propose that several mechanisms may play a role in the production of leucoderma in LS: 1) decreased melanin production; 2) block in transfer of melanosomes to keratinocytes; and 3) melanocyte loss. The latter finding may be the pathogenic connection (lichenoid dermatitis of LS triggering an autoimmune reaction to melanocytes) that underlies the documented association of LS with vitiligo.
硬化性苔藓(LS)与白癜风有一个共同特征,即皮肤呈乳白色外观。通过活检,具有诊断意义的真皮硬化可轻易将LS与白癜风及其他白斑病病因区分开来。为了确定LS色素减退的机制,我们对LS病例的样本进行检查,观察黑色素含量(Fontana-Masson染色)和黑素细胞数量(HMB-45 [PMEL-17/gp100]、Mel-5 [TRP-1]、Mart-1 [Melan A])的变化,并将这些结果与正常皮肤、急性瘢痕、白癜风和扁平苔藓(LP;一种常见的炎症性色素沉着病因)的对照样本进行比较。在LS中发现的黑色素化程度和范围与急性瘢痕(主要表现为角质形成细胞黑色素减少)、含有大量噬黑素细胞区域的LP以及显示角质形成细胞局部无黑色素色素区域的白癜风重叠。通过苏木精-伊红染色以及针对Mel-5和Mart-1的免疫细胞化学检测,每200个基底角质形成细胞中,LS的黑素细胞平均计数低于急性瘢痕、LP和正常皮肤。此外,少数LS病例的黑素细胞有显著丢失,与白癜风相当。令人惊讶的是,Mart-1在67%的白癜风病例中识别出罕见的黑素细胞,且在LS和对照样本中识别出的黑素细胞池比Mel-5标记的要大得多。此外,LP和LS的进展期病变中Mart-1计数最高。在大多数急性瘢痕以及LP和LS晚期病变中发现了HMB-45免疫反应性黑素细胞,但其水平明显低于Mel-5和Mart-1标记的黑素细胞,而在白癜风或正常皮肤中未发现。我们认为,几种机制可能在LS的白斑形成中起作用:1)黑色素生成减少;2)黑素小体向角质形成细胞转移受阻;3)黑素细胞丢失。后一发现可能是LS与白癜风之间已记录关联的致病联系(LS的苔藓样皮炎引发对黑素细胞的自身免疫反应)。