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Am J Physiol Cell Physiol (November 5, 2008). doi:10.1152/ajpcell.00161.2008
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Submitted on March 20, 2008
Revised on October 13, 2008
Accepted on October 16, 2008

Apoptosis is not required for acantholysis in pemphigus vulgaris

Enno Schmidt1, Judith Gutberlet1, Daniela Siegmund2, Daniela Berg2, Harald Wajant2, and Jens Waschke1*

1 Universtity Of Wuerzburg
2 University Hospital Wurzburg

* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: jens.waschke{at}mail.uni-wuerzburg.de.

The autoimmune blistering skin disease pemphigus vulgaris (PV) is caused primarily by autoantibodies against desmosomal cadherins. It was reported that apoptosis can be detected in pemphigus skin lesions and that apoptosis can be induced by PV-IgG in cultured keratinocytes. However, the role of apoptosis in PV pathogenesis is unclear at present. In this study, we provide evidence that apoptosis is not required for acantholysis in PV. In skin lesions from two PV patients, TUNEL positivity but not cleaved caspase-3 was detected in single keratinocytes in some lesions but was completely absent in other lesions from the same patients. In cultures of human keratinocytes (HaCaT and normal human epidermal keratinocytes), PV-IgG from three different PV patients caused acantholysis, fragmented staining of Dsg 3 staining and cytokeratin retraction in the absence of nuclear fragmentation, TUNEL positivity and caspase-3 cleavage and hence in the absence of detectable apoptosis. To further rule out the contribution of apoptotic mechanisms, we used two different approaches which are effective to block apoptosis induced by various stimuli. Inhibition of caspases by z-VAD-fmk as well as overexpression of FLIPL and FLIPS to inhibit receptor-mediated apoptosis did not block PV-IgG-induced effects indicating that apoptosis was not required. Taken together, we conclude that apoptosis is not a prerequisite for skin blistering in PV but may occur secondary to acantholysis.




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V. Spindler, W.-M. Heupel, A. Efthymiadis, E. Schmidt, R. Eming, C. Rankl, P. Hinterdorfer, T. Muller, D. Drenckhahn, and J. Waschke
Desmocollin 3-mediated Binding Is Crucial for Keratinocyte Cohesion and Is Impaired in Pemphigus
J. Biol. Chem., October 30, 2009; 284(44): 30556 - 30564.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]




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