Reappraisal of in situ immunophenotypic analysis of psoriasis skin: interaction of activated HLA-DR+ immunocompetent cells and endothelial cells is a major feature of psoriatic lesions
- PMID: 7512323
- DOI: 10.1007/BF00370733
Reappraisal of in situ immunophenotypic analysis of psoriasis skin: interaction of activated HLA-DR+ immunocompetent cells and endothelial cells is a major feature of psoriatic lesions
Abstract
Psoriasis is an inflammatory skin disease of unknown aetiology. Many observations indicate that T cells play an important role in the pathogenesis of the disease. Upregulation of MHC class-II molecules on immunocompetent cells, endothelial cells and keratinocytes on lesional psoriatic skin has been regarded as a hallmark of the disease. However, there is some controversy in the literature regarding the cell types expressing class-II molecules and there is limited information about the presence of immune cells other than T cells and antigen presenting cells in the cellular infiltrates of psoriatic skin. We therefore reinvestigated the subject using immunocytochemical single and multiple staining techniques. In agreement with earlier reports, our studies showed that the cellular infiltrates in lesional skin consist largely of HLA-DR+/IL-2R+ T cells, HLA-DR+/CD1a+ Langerhans cells, and HLA-DR+/CD68+ macrophages. We found increased HLA-DR expression mostly on immuno-competent cells and endothelial cells, but no prominent HLA-DR expression on keratinocytes in lesional psoriatic skin. Upregulation of HLA-DR on endothelial cells and in mononuclear infiltrates was also evident in the non-lesional skin of psoriatic patients as compared with normal controls. B cells and natural killer cells were also found in the cellular infiltrates in lesional psoriatic skin. In spite of the presence of a large amount of activated T cells in the epidermis, we found that HLA-DR expression on keratinocytes was not a major feature of psoriatic skin.
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