Skin Rashes Research Today is a free monthly online journal that collates and summarizes the latest research about Skin Rashes, including details on dermatitis, itches, creams, medication, treatment. | ||||||||
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Presence of chimeric maternally derived keratinocytes in cutaneous inflammatory diseases of children: the example of pityriasis lichenoides.Khosrotehrani K, Guegan S, Fraitag S, Oster M, de Prost Y, Bodemer C, Aractingi S Service de dermatologie, Hôpital Tenon, Paris, France. During pregnancy, maternal cells may enter the fetal circulation and persist until adulthood. The fate of these cells remains unknown. As unexplained T-cell-mediated conditions such as pityriasis lichenoides (PL) may occur in children, we aimed at identifying maternal cells in lesional skin of PL and controls. Archived skin biopsy specimens from young males with PL, atopic dermatitis, or normal skin were scanned for the presence of female (presumably maternal) cells using fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) with X and Y chromosome-specific probes. Phenotyping of maternal cells relied on FISH combined with anti-CD45, anti-CD1a, or anti-cytokeratin labelling, identifying leukocytes, Langerhans cells, and keratinocytes, respectively. Maternal cells were found in PL (11/12) and controls (4/7), but their average frequency was higher in PL: 99 per million cells as compared to 5 per million cells in controls (P = 0.005). In the epidermis, the maternal microchimeric cells were labelled by anti-cytokeratin in all cases. We identified maternally derived keratinocytes in the skin of male children with inflammatory skin disorders. These cells may either help repair the damaged skin or home initially in the skin and trigger a host (child) versus graft (mother) disease. Published 18 January 2006 in J Invest Dermatol, 126(2): 345-8.
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