Williams M L
Dermatology Service, Veterans Administration Medical Center, San Francisco, California.
Pediatr Dermatol. 1992 Dec;9(4):365-8. doi: 10.1111/j.1525-1470.1992.tb00632.x.
The disorders of cornification (ichthyoses) comprise acquired and inherited disorders characterized clinically by generalized scaling and histologically by hyperkeratosis. They may arise through defects in the production or maintenance of a normal cornified cell compartment, or both. The stratum corneum is composed of protein-enriched and lipid-depleted corneocytes ("bricks") surrounded by an intercellular domain ("mortar") composed of hydrophobic, lipid-enriched membrane bilayers, and containing desmosomes and a limited array of hydrolytic enzymes. Mechanisms whereby a genetic defect involving either the bricks or the mortar may result in abnormal stratum corneum retention are discussed using ichthyosis vulgaris and recessive X-linked ichthyosis as examples. In addition, epidermal hyperproliferation, which floods the cornified cell compartment with incompletely formed units, results in hyperkeratosis. To date, no primary disorders of epidermal hyperproliferation have been defined. Recent work, however, demonstrates that stratum corneum barrier function regulates epidermal DNA synthesis. For example, in essential fatty acid deficiency, barrier dysfunction is responsible at least in part ror the epidermal hyperproliferation. Defective barrier function due to defective lamellar body secretion may also underlie the phenotypic changes after birth in harlequin ichthyosis; that is, from the massive, constrictive hyperkeratosis of the newborn to an exfoliative erythroderma in survivors. The mechanisms whereby specific defects in cornification result in generalized scaling disease are only beginning to be defined. Yet, even at this early stage, the view of the stratum corneum as a tightly organized structure whose function is highly regulated is emerging. Hence, the disorders of cornification should provide important insights into stratum corneum structure and function.
角化异常性疾病(鱼鳞病)包括获得性和遗传性疾病,其临床特征为全身性鳞屑,组织学特征为角化过度。它们可能是由于正常角化细胞区室的产生或维持存在缺陷,或两者皆有。角质层由富含蛋白质且脂质减少的角质形成细胞(“砖块”)组成,周围是由富含脂质的疏水膜双层构成的细胞间区域(“灰浆”),并含有桥粒和有限的水解酶。本文以寻常型鱼鳞病和隐性X连锁鱼鳞病为例,讨论了涉及“砖块”或“灰浆”的基因缺陷导致角质层异常滞留的机制。此外,表皮过度增殖会使角化细胞区室充满未完全形成的细胞单位,从而导致角化过度。迄今为止,尚未明确表皮过度增殖的原发性疾病。然而,最近的研究表明,角质层屏障功能可调节表皮DNA合成。例如,在必需脂肪酸缺乏时,屏障功能障碍至少部分导致了表皮过度增殖。板层小体分泌缺陷导致的屏障功能缺陷也可能是丑角鱼鳞病出生后表型变化的基础,即从新生儿的大量、紧缩性角化过度到幸存者的剥脱性红皮病。导致全身性鳞屑病的特定角化缺陷机制才刚刚开始被阐明。然而,即使在这个早期阶段,角质层作为一个组织结构紧密且功能受到高度调节的结构的观点正在形成。因此,角化异常性疾病应为角质层的结构和功能提供重要的见解。