Abstract

Skin of patients with severe generalized recessive dystrophic epidermolysis bullosa (SGRDEB) was studied by immunoelectron microscopy and immunoblotting with antibodies to type VII collagen, a major structural component of anchoring fibrils. In normal skin, the protein was localized to the dermoepidermal junction zone below the basement membrane and was extractable from the papillary dermis after artificial epidermolysis. In SGRDEB skin, neither immunoreactive material below the basement membrane nor identifiable anchoring fibrils could be recognized and neither the tissue form nor the specific proteolytic fragments of type VII collagen were found in extracts of SGRDEB skin. Very low amounts of type VII collagen alpha-chains could be detected in cultures of SGRDEB-fibroblasts, whereas normal fibroblasts synthesized more of this collagen. These results suggest that a genetic defect in the correct synthesis, secretion, or in the molecular assembly of type VII collagen may underlie SGRDEB.

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