Abstract

The epidermal permeability barrier is provided by intercellular lipids forming multiple membrane bilayers in the stratum corneum. In the fetal rat, the barrier to transepidermal water loss forms during the 20th d of gestation and is accompanied by 1) increasing stratum corneum thickness; 2) increasing stratum corneum lipid content, particularly nonpolar ceramide and cholesterol content; and 3) the formation of lamellar unit structures throughout the stratum corneum interstices. In this report, we demonstrate that among pups of 20 d gestational age increasing barrier competence is correlated with increasing fetal weight. It has been previously demonstrated that fetal rats subjected to intrauterine growth retardation (IUGR) exhibit a thinner stratum corneum and decreased content of differentiation-specific epidermal structural proteins. To determine whether IUGR fetal rats also exhibit immaturity of barrier function and the barrier membrane system, maternal rats underwent unilateral uterine vessel ligation on d 17 or 18 of gestation and IUGR and control littermates were harvested on d 20, 21, or 22 of gestation for determination of transepidermal water loss. Despite significant somatic growth retardation and a thinner stratum corneum, barrier function in IUGR fetal rats did not significantly differ from that in control littermates at any gestational age. In both IUGR and control fetal rat epidermis at 21 d gestational age, lipids were deposited in a membrane pattern as visualized by nile red fluorescence microscopy and formed lamellar unit membrane structures throughout the stratum corneum intercellular domains as observed by electron microscopy.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call