Biochemical and immunohistochemical comparison of collagen in granuloma annulare and skin sarcoidosis
Oikarinen A, Kinnunen T, Kallioinen M.
DOI: 10.2340/0001555569277283
Abstract
Collagen was studied by biochemical and immunohistochemical means in 5 patients with granuloma annulare (GA) and 3 with cutaneous sarcoidosis (SA). The solubility of collagen from the lesional skin in acetic acid was higher than that of collagen from unaffected skin from both patients and control subjects. Collagen concentration in the skin lesions, measured in terms of hydroxyproline content, was reduced in 3 patients with granuloma annulare and one with sarcoidosis, but the ratio of type III/I collagen was unchanged vis-?†-vis non-affected skin. The collagen concentration in non-affected skin of both GA and SA-patients was also lower than in controls. The most typical immunohistochemical finding was the association of type III procollagen and fibronectin with granulomas in the lesional skin of both GA and SA cases. The activity of prolyl hydroxylase, a key enzyme in collagen biosynthesis, was markedly increased in the lesional skin, indicating that collagen synthesis in vivo was also increased. Surprisingly, collagen synthesis was not increased in cell culture studies. This could be due to cell selection as observed previously in scleroderma. Another possibility could be that various mediators released in vivo from inflammatory cells activate fibroblasts. However, when cells are subcultivated, this effect is not maintained. In conclusion, marked changes in collagen could be observed in granuloma annulare and skin sarcoidosis, reflecting increased turnover of collagen in vivo.
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