Psoriasis is a common, sometimes severe, non-malignant skin disease characterized by hyperproliferation and abnormal differentiation of keratinocytes. Because proto-oncogenes are implicated in both cell proliferation and differentiation, their expression could be modified in skin diseases such as psoriasis. The c-fos and c-jun proto-oncogenes, whose products associate to form a heterodimeric transcription factor, are among the first genes to be expressed when certain cells are stimulated to either proliferate or differentiate.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDifferentiation
September 1990
Human skin is a unique organ, which can be reconstituted in vitro and represents an interesting system for studying cell proliferation and differentiation. A simple technique for producing reconstituted skin with optimal epidermal differentiation is described and characterized. A 4-mm punch biopsy of normal human skin is deposited on the epidermal side of mortified de-epidermized human dermis maintained at the air-liquid interface with a metallic support.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Invest Dermatol
April 1990
The proto-oncogene c-fos is thought to play an important role in the modulation of cell growth and differentiation. In normal tissues that have been studied to date, c-fos expression has been found to be regulated in a tissue-specific manner. Actually, little is known about its expression in normal human adult skin (NHAS).
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