Publications by authors named "A M Vermeesch-Markslag"

Saliva was investigated for its suitability as a biopsy tissue for the determination of glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase deficiency. It appears that there is a significant difference between the activity of the enzyme in patients and controls. However, some controls have very low values making discrimination between patients and controls using a qualitative method impossible.

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The skin epithelium and its organelles use glycogen as well as glucose as source of energy. Therefore the characterisation of glycogen metabolism and the enzymes involved is important in the study of mechanisms regulating the normal or abnormal differentiation of skin organelles such as sebaceous glands and hair follicles. The present paper describes fluorimetric methods for the determination of glycogen and for the measurements of phosphorylase and phosphorylase kinase activity in one and the same lysate of minute tissue samples.

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Recessive X-linked ichthyosis (RXLI) has its biochemical basis in a defect of the enzyme steroid sulfatase. Since several studies have reported a simultaneous deficiency of arylsulfatase C and steroid sulfatase it has been hypothesized that both enzymes are identical. In human hair follicles, however, hydrolytic activity for 4-methylumbelliferone sulfate, the substrate for arylsulfatase C, is found, while dehydroepiandrosterone sulfate is not hydrolyzed at all.

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Psoriatic and control human hair follicle keratinocytes were cultured on bovine eye lens capsules in Epicult dishes for a period of 5-6 weeks and examined using light microscopy. The following morphological differences between cultures were observed: 1. The lower cell layers contained predominantly flattened cells in psoriatic cultures instead of roundish in control cultures.

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A fluorimetric procedure for the determination of phosphoglycerate kinase in single human hair follicles is described. Enzyme studies on different parts of hair follicles after dissection show that the distribution of glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase matches that of phosphoglycerate kinase. Glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase can therefore be used as a reference enzyme to compensate for differences in hair follicle sizes.

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