Abstract

Human epidermal keratinocytes (KCs) were isolated from lesional and from uninvolved skin of 8 patients with chronic plaque-like psoriasis and from the normal skin of 8 healthy volunteers. Primary KC cultures, grown on 3T3 cell feeder layers, were examined over a period of 4 weeks and their plating efficiency, colony growth area, DNA synthesis and ultrastructural cell differentiation were evaluated. Psoriatic KCs formed colonies one day earlier than non-psoriatic controls and proliferated faster during the first 2 weeks, as assessed by the mean colony growth area and 3H-thymidine incorporation. After 4 weeks, however, no significant differences were observed between the in vitro proliferation parameters of normal and psoriatic KCs. At the ultrastructural level, cultures of lesional psoriatic KCs consisted of more cell layers with adherent transitional cells and incomplete formation of cornified envelopes, even after 4 weeks, while KCs from uninvolved psoriatic skin were characterized by a transient delay of in vitro maturation. These results indicate that the characteristic hyperproliferation of psoriatic KCs may only be maintained over a short period of primary culture, whereas defective terminal differentiation of lesional psoriatic KCs was maintained throughout the culture period.

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