An immunohistological study of desmosomal components in pemphigus

Abstract
Pemphigus vulgaris (PV) and pemphigus foliaceus (PF) are autoimmune diseases in which there is loss of cohesion between keratinocytes (acantholysis) and blistering within the epidermis. PV is characterized by acantholysis predominantly between the epidermal basal cells and suprabasal layers, whereas in PF intraepidermal cleavage is higher in the epidermis. Adhesion between keratinocytes is dependent on the function of transmembrane glycoproteins of the cadherin family present in specialized adhesion junctions, the desmosomes. The pathogenesis of acantholysis In pemphigus is uncertain, but the pemphigus autoantibodies bind to epithelial cadherins. We have used monoclonal antibodies to desmosomal components to investigate their distribution in different forms of pemphigus. Our results show that the localization of desmosomal components is abnormal in intact perilesional epidermis, intact epidermis above the blisters in PV and intact epidermis below the blisters in PF. We suggest that autoantibody binding may have a direct effect on the function of specific epithelial cadherins, but will only cause cell separation where the antigen is the principal adhesion molecule.

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