Keloids are characterized by extreme fibroblastic overgrowth of unknown pathogenesis after skin injury. Previous studies, mostly in non-Caucasian populations, suggest that p53 mutations may be involved. To substantiate this, we performed DNA sequence analysis of exons 4-8 of the p53 gene and immunohistochemical staining of p53 protein in archived keloidal tissue samples from 23 Caucasian patients.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSelective expression of certain chemokine receptors by melanoma cells and the presence of their ligands in tissues might govern organ site-specific metastasis. Because the expression profile of chemokine receptors in tissues of melanocytic origin is unknown, we performed a comprehensive study on melanocytic tissue samples investigating the expression of 18 chemokine receptors at the mRNA level by real-time polymerase chain reaction, using a semiquantitative approach, and of 3 chemokine receptors (CXCR6, CCR9, and XCR1) at the protein level. We report on the de novo expression of CXCR6 in primary melanomas and melanoma metastases, but absence in melanoma cell lines and congenital nevi.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Patients with psoriasis treated with psoralen-UV-A (PUVA) are at increased risk of skin cancer; however, the exact causes of this increased incidence are not well understood. It has been suggested that PUVA may increase expression of the tumorigenic agent human papillomavirus (HPV) in skin by directly stimulating virus replication, immune suppression, or both, thereby leading to skin cancer formation.
Objective: To determine whether HPV DNA prevalence in the skin is increased after long-term PUVA treatment.
Psoriasis patients exposed to high cumulative doses of psoralen + ultraviolet A frequently exhibit so-called "psoralen + ultraviolet A keratoses" (i.e., hyperkeratotic lesions with varying degrees of histologic atypia).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSquamous cell carcinomas in psoralen-plus-ultraviolet A (PUVA) treated patients frequently exhibit p53 tumor suppressor genes and Ha-ras protooncogenes that are mutated at dipyrimidine sites and carry the ultraviolet fingerprint (i.e., C-to-T or CC-to-TT transitions).
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