
Further Studies of Epidermal Mucopolysaccharides
PETER FLESCH, MD;
ELIZABETH C. J. ESODA, MD
Arch Dermatol. 1963;88(6):706-708.
Abstract
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An improved method is described for the isolation from horny layers of a fraction with a high mucopolysaccharide content. The yields were about 0.5%-1 % per gram of horny layer extracted.
In the fractions isolated from scales of patients with psoriasis or ichthyosiform erythroderma the hexosamine was mostly in combined form; in callus it was largely free. The fractions contained varying amounts of sulfate. The material was split by elastase, but was resistant to hyaluronidase. The findings are compatible with the assumption that psoriatic scales contain chondroitin sulfate B (dermatan sulfate).
Homogenates of guinea pig skin are capable of splitting acetylhexosamine from crude chondroitin sulfate. The question of the existence of hyaluronidase-like enzymes in skin cannot be regarded as settled.
The disturbed mucopolysaccharide metabolism in the psoriatic epidermis may be due to an abnormal substrate, an enzymatic deficiency, or both. These possibilities are open for experimental study.
Author Affiliations
PHILADELPHIA
From the Department of Dermatology, University of Pennsylvania, School of Medicine.
Footnotes
This study was conducted under the sponsorship of the Commission on Cutaneous Diseases of the Armed Forces Epidemiological Board and was supported in part by the Surgeon General, Department of the Army and in part by grant AM 07082-03 GM from the National Institutes of Health.
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