Literature DB >> 15099369

Alterations in the basement membrane zone in pili annulati hair follicles as demonstrated by electron microscopy and immunohistochemistry.

K A Giehl1, D J P Ferguson, D Dean, Y H Chuang, J Allen, D A R D Berker, A Tosti, R P R Dawber, F Wojnarowska.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Pili annulati is a rare autosomal dominant inherited hair shaft abnormality in which clinical examination reveals alternating light and dark bands leading to a shiny appearance of the hair. The clinically light bands are the abnormal areas due to cavities within the cortex. The pathogenesis remains unknown.
OBJECTIVES: To investigate the expression of the basement membrane zone (BMZ) components in pili annulati hair follicles of the scalp.
METHODS: Transmission electron microscopy (TEM) was carried out on scalp sections of six individuals with pili annulati and six controls. Longitudinal sections of scalp tissues from four individuals with pili annulati and six normal controls were studied by immunohistochemistry with a panel of monoclonal antibodies to the following BMZ components: alpha(6)beta(4) integrin, laminin 5, LH39 antigen, laminin 1, collagen IV and collagen VII.
RESULTS: Using TEM, pili annulati scalp specimens exhibited a reduplicated lamina densa in the region of the root bulb in comparison with the single thin electron-dense band in controls. Using immunohistochemistry, there was a wavy BMZ in pili annulati follicles with antibodies to components of the lamina lucida, lamina densa and anchoring fibrils, whereas the BMZ in control hair follicles was as a smooth linear band. The expression of the hemidesmosome-associated alpha(6)beta(4) integrin was linear in both pili annulati and control hair follicles.
CONCLUSIONS: Our results suggest that the genetic defect may be a mutation in proteins involved in signalling and regulation of formation and degradation of the lamina densa and sublamina densa region resulting in abnormal assembly or remodelling of the BMZ.

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Year:  2004        PMID: 15099369     DOI: 10.1111/j.0007-0963.2004.05837.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Br J Dermatol        ISSN: 0007-0963            Impact factor:   9.302


  5 in total

1.  Trichoscopy in genetic hair shaft abnormalities.

Authors:  Adriana Rakowska; Monika Slowinska; Elzbieta Kowalska-Oledzka; Lidia Rudnicka
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Review 2.  [Genetic hair diseases. An update].

Authors:  J Frank; P Poblete-Gutiérrez; K Giehl
Journal:  Hautarzt       Date:  2013-11       Impact factor: 0.751

3.  Pili annulati coincident with alopecia areata, autoimmune thyroid disease, and primary IgA deficiency: case report and considerations on the literature.

Authors:  E Castelli; S Fiorella; V Caputo
Journal:  Case Rep Dermatol       Date:  2012-09-14

4.  Phenotypes of the ovarian follicular basal lamina predict developmental competence of oocytes.

Authors:  Helen F Irving-Rodgers; Stephanie Morris; Rachael A Collett; Teija T Peura; Margaret Davy; Jeremy G Thompson; Helen D Mason; Raymond J Rodgers
Journal:  Hum Reprod       Date:  2008-12-18       Impact factor: 6.918

5.  Pili annulati with fragility: Electron microscopic findings of a case.

Authors:  Gulsen Akoglu; Selma Emre; Ahmet Metin; K Mine Erbil; Demet Akpolat; Aysegul Firat; Murvet Hayran
Journal:  Int J Trichology       Date:  2012-04
  5 in total

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