This study was undertaken to identify the extent of involvement of cutaneous and noncutaneous epithelia during expression in utero of junctional epidermolysis bullosa. Skin and other organs from a 19-wk estimated gestational age fetus affected with junctional epidermolysis bullosa and from age-matched controls were examined by light and transmission electron microscopy. In the affected fetus, skin samples from different body regions including trunk, leg, arm, and finger all showed some separation at the dermal-epidermal junction in the plane of the lamina lucida. Hemidesmosomes were absent or hypoplastic, whereas anchoring fibrils appeared normal in structure and number. Interfollicular epidermis appeared to have separated easily, whereas some follicles remained anchored in the dermis. Areas of epithelium in the trachea and bronchi had separated, but within the lung parenchyma the epithelium of smaller bronchioles and alveoli remained attached to supporting connective tissue. The transitional epithelium of the urinary bladder showed small areas of separation compared with the gall bladder epithelium, which showed extensive separation. Gall bladder epithelium in several control fetuses also was consistently separated. In the affected fetus as well as in controls, gall bladder had multiple layers of basal lamina, a previously unrecognized structural feature of human fetal gall bladder. Epithelia that remained intact included the linings of the stomach and small and large intestines and endothelium of large and small vessels in all organs. Kidney, spleen, liver, and lymph nodes appeared normal in all aspects. In control samples, neither skin nor most of the noncutaneous epithelia had separated from the underlying connective tissue.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

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