Some of the factors that affect the development of internal complications in diabetes mellitus may play a role in the development of diabetic dermopathy, and diabetic dermopathy may serve as a clinical sign of an increased likelihood of these internal complications in diabetic patients.
Our study shows similar clinical findings to those described in other series. The relatively high frequency of carcinomas of the colon and urinary bladder was not reported elsewhere. We observed a consistent rate of new cases each year with two peaks in 1970 and 1986-1989, the cause of which deserves explanation. Of interest is the relative rise in the number of females with Kaposi's sarcoma. A relative high risk for developing Kaposi's sarcoma has been found among Jews of Ashkenazi origin compared to those of other ethnic groups. Israeli-born subjects presented a relatively more aggressive course of disease than others.
Recently, we showed that atrichia with papular lesions (APL), a rare inherited form of alopecia, is transmitted as an autosomal recessive trait in a large inbred kindred of Israeli-Arab origin. Furthermore, we mapped the APL locus to a 5-cM region of chromosome 8p12 in this family. The human "hairless" gene is a candidate target gene for the disease mutation because it maps to the APL locus and because it was recently found to be mutated in a related but clinically distinct form of alopecia known as "alopecia universalis" or "congenital alopecia." In the present study, the coding sequence of the hairless gene was compared by reverse transcription-PCR in fibroblast cell lines derived from an affected patient and an unrelated individual. We identified a single-base deletion (3434delC) in the hairless gene that cosegregated with the disease phenotype in the family. This deletion is predicted to cause a frameshift mutation in the highly conserved C-terminal part of the hairless protein, a region putatively involved in the transcription factor activity of the hairless gene product. The present results are indicative of phenotypic heterogeneity in inherited atrichias caused by mutations in the hairless gene, suggesting different roles for the regions mutated in APL and in other forms of congenital atrichia during hair development.
Impaired regulation of apoptosis is known to be associated with the development of various forms of cancer. Fas binding to its ligand, Fas ligand (Fas-L), has been shown to trigger apoptosis in various cell types. Fas-L is expressed by melanoma cells and has been suggested to play a role in melanoma escape from immune surveillance. In the present study, we assessed apoptotic activity and examined Fas and Fas-L expression in malignant melanomas, Spitz nevi and ordinary melanocytic nevi. We evaluated apoptotic activity using terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase (TdT)-mediated dUTP nick end labeling. Apoptotic activity was found to be minimal in melanomas and moderate in Spitz nevi. In contrast, common nevi demonstrated significant levels of apoptosis in the deep parts of the tumor. Fas was found to be expressed by all Spitz nevi, most melanocytic nevi and approximately half of the malignant melanoma specimens. Fas expression was also significantly more pronounced in Spitz nevus cells as compared with the two other tumors. The anti-Fas-L antibody was found to stain all three melanocytic tumors. Staining was shown to be stronger and more frequent in melanoma cells as compared to the nevus cells. Using the Spearman test, no significant correlation between Fas-L expression in melanoma cells and apoptosis in MM-infiltrating mononuclear cells was found, suggesting that Fas-L expression in melanoma cells may not be instrumental in their ability to escape immune mechanisms of defense. In contrast, increased levels of apoptosis in the deep parts of melanocytic nevi may reflect and possibly contribute to their benign nature.
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