1.Random Amplified Polymorphic DNA for Classification of Candida Species.
Hae Ook CHO ; Dong Hoon SHIN ; Jong Soo CHOI
Korean Journal of Dermatology 1997;35(1):71-81
BACKGROUND: PUVA has been used effectively in the treatment of vitiligo, but the mechanism by which PUVA stimulates melanocyte proliferation in vitiligo is not known. Several mechanisms have been suggested to be involved in the process of repigmentation of vitiligo. First, UV light, with or without psoralen, directly stimulates the proliferation of melanocytes. Secondly, PUVA may act. on epidermal keratinocytes or dermal components to stimulate t,hem to release certain melanocyte growth st,inulation factors that enhance the proliferation of melanocytes in depigmented lesions. Thirdly, PUVA irnmunologically leads to the impairment of epidermal Langerhans cell function and alteration of circulating T and B cell function, which results in the suppression of the stimuli is for rnelanocyte destruction during the therapy. OBJECTIVE: To test, th hypothesis that PUVA induced repigmentation in vitiligo results from the stimulation of growth factors that induce melanocyte proliferation, and that PUVA may suppress the immune reacticin to melanocytes, especially in autoantibody synt,hesis, we examined the effects of sera on the growth of epidermal melanocytes and control cells, and the incidence of antibodies to melanocyte and melanoma cells(SK-Mel 2~3) in the sera of patients with vitiligo. We also had normal control individuals and studied the changes of the antibody titer in the sera of patients with vitiligo. METHODS: The rate of H thymidine uptake was estimat,ed in cultured melanocytes and fibroblasts t,reated by patients sera before and after PUVA treatment. SDS-PAGE and immunoblotting analysis were used to idcntify anti pigment cell autoantibodies and were compared to the titers of autoantibodies after PUVA. RESULTS: 1. Melanocyte and fibrablast proliferation was increased by PUVA treated sera. Their proliferation was in proportion to the duration of the PUVA treatment. Melanocytes proliferated more than fibroblasts. 2. Significant differences between vitiligo patients and normal controls were found in the inci dence of anti-pigment cell antibodies. The antibodies were predominantly directed to melanocyte antigens of 110 kD, 65 kD, 45 kD and melanoma cell antigens of 110 kD, 103 kD, 88kD, 70 kD, 56 kD, 41 kD. 3. The titer of anti piment cell antibodies showed a tendency to decrease after PUVA treat- ment in most patients regardless of clinical improvement. Conclusion ; PUVA treated sera induced proliferation of melanocytes and fibroblasts and the production of aut,oantibodies was suppressed against pigment cell antigens through irnmunosuppression, which might help in the repigmentation of vitiligo.
Antibodies
;
Autoantibodies
;
Candida*
;
Classification*
;
DNA*
;
Electrophoresis, Polyacrylamide Gel
;
Fibroblasts
;
Ficusin
;
Humans
;
Immunoblotting
;
Incidence
;
Intercellular Signaling Peptides and Proteins
;
Keratinocytes
;
Melanocytes
;
Melanoma
;
Thymidine
;
Ultraviolet Rays
;
Vitiligo
2.Random Amplified Polymorphic DNA for Classification of Candida Species.
Hae Ook CHO ; Dong Hoon SHIN ; Jong Soo CHOI
Korean Journal of Dermatology 1997;35(1):71-81
BACKGROUND: PUVA has been used effectively in the treatment of vitiligo, but the mechanism by which PUVA stimulates melanocyte proliferation in vitiligo is not known. Several mechanisms have been suggested to be involved in the process of repigmentation of vitiligo. First, UV light, with or without psoralen, directly stimulates the proliferation of melanocytes. Secondly, PUVA may act. on epidermal keratinocytes or dermal components to stimulate t,hem to release certain melanocyte growth st,inulation factors that enhance the proliferation of melanocytes in depigmented lesions. Thirdly, PUVA irnmunologically leads to the impairment of epidermal Langerhans cell function and alteration of circulating T and B cell function, which results in the suppression of the stimuli is for rnelanocyte destruction during the therapy. OBJECTIVE: To test, th hypothesis that PUVA induced repigmentation in vitiligo results from the stimulation of growth factors that induce melanocyte proliferation, and that PUVA may suppress the immune reacticin to melanocytes, especially in autoantibody synt,hesis, we examined the effects of sera on the growth of epidermal melanocytes and control cells, and the incidence of antibodies to melanocyte and melanoma cells(SK-Mel 2~3) in the sera of patients with vitiligo. We also had normal control individuals and studied the changes of the antibody titer in the sera of patients with vitiligo. METHODS: The rate of H thymidine uptake was estimat,ed in cultured melanocytes and fibroblasts t,reated by patients sera before and after PUVA treatment. SDS-PAGE and immunoblotting analysis were used to idcntify anti pigment cell autoantibodies and were compared to the titers of autoantibodies after PUVA. RESULTS: 1. Melanocyte and fibrablast proliferation was increased by PUVA treated sera. Their proliferation was in proportion to the duration of the PUVA treatment. Melanocytes proliferated more than fibroblasts. 2. Significant differences between vitiligo patients and normal controls were found in the inci dence of anti-pigment cell antibodies. The antibodies were predominantly directed to melanocyte antigens of 110 kD, 65 kD, 45 kD and melanoma cell antigens of 110 kD, 103 kD, 88kD, 70 kD, 56 kD, 41 kD. 3. The titer of anti piment cell antibodies showed a tendency to decrease after PUVA treat- ment in most patients regardless of clinical improvement. Conclusion ; PUVA treated sera induced proliferation of melanocytes and fibroblasts and the production of aut,oantibodies was suppressed against pigment cell antigens through irnmunosuppression, which might help in the repigmentation of vitiligo.
Antibodies
;
Autoantibodies
;
Candida*
;
Classification*
;
DNA*
;
Electrophoresis, Polyacrylamide Gel
;
Fibroblasts
;
Ficusin
;
Humans
;
Immunoblotting
;
Incidence
;
Intercellular Signaling Peptides and Proteins
;
Keratinocytes
;
Melanocytes
;
Melanoma
;
Thymidine
;
Ultraviolet Rays
;
Vitiligo
3.Leiomyoma of the Ovary A report of two cases.
Jeong Hae KIE ; Tai Seung KIM ; Dong Hwan SHIN
Korean Journal of Pathology 1999;33(7):529-532
Ovarian leiomyoma is a rare form of the ovarian mesenchymal neoplasm and about 50 cases have been reported in the literature. It is believed that many cases may go unnoticed because they are usually small in size and frequently mistaken for the more common fibroma or fibrothecoma. Its origin is still controversial and many possibilities are considered including the smooth muscle in the blood vessel wall of the hilum or the multipotential ovarian stromal cell. Herein we describe two cases of ovarian leiomyoma with its characteristic histologic finding.
Blood Vessels
;
Female
;
Fibroma
;
Leiomyoma*
;
Muscle, Smooth
;
Ovary*
;
Stromal Cells
4.A Case of Benign Cephalic Histiocytosis.
Duck Hyun KIM ; Dong Sik BANG ; Shin Won HAN ; Kyoo Cheon WHANG ; Hae Eul LEE
Korean Journal of Dermatology 1986;24(3):433-438
A 18-month-old girl was seen because of an yellowish brown papular eruptions on the face, earlobes and neck of one year duration. A skin biopsy specimen revealed circumscribed cellular infiltrates composed of predorninantly pleornorphic histiocytes. Electron microscopy of biopsy material disclosed numerous worm like particles and coated vescles in limited area of the cell cytoplasm, consistent with the findinga described in benign cephalic histiocytosis. After six months of her first visit, the individual papules became flattened.
Biopsy
;
Coated Vesicles
;
Cytoplasm
;
Female
;
Histiocytes
;
Histiocytosis*
;
Humans
;
Infant
;
Microscopy, Electron
;
Neck
;
Skin
5.A Case of Solitary Glomus Tumor.
Hae Ook CHO ; Dong Hoon SHIN ; Jong Soo CHOI ; Ki Hong KIM
Yeungnam University Journal of Medicine 1996;13(1):152-157
We report a case of subungual solitary glomus tumor in a 28-year-old female, who has suffered from pain and tenderness of the left 4th finger tip for about 5 years. Simple surgical excision was performed for removal of the tumor mass and for the relief of the subjective symptoms. No recurrence has been observed for 5 months following excision of the tumor.
Adult
;
Female
;
Fingers
;
Glomus Tumor*
;
Humans
;
Recurrence
6.Traumatic Hyphema.
Shin Dong KIM ; Hae Soo NAM ; Sung Hee LEE
Journal of the Korean Ophthalmological Society 1982;23(3):639-644
Among 135 ocular injuries with Hyphema that had been treated at the St. Benedict(Sung-Bun-Do) Hospital, Pusan, Korea between the period of July 1979 to June 1982, the medical records of 47 cases of pure contusion Hyphema were collected; there were 41 male, 6 femla and 10 were ambulatory, 37 were admitted, of whom, 10 underwent surgical evacuation. The out-patients were managed with uni-ocular patches or pin-hole spectacle; and all hospitalized cases were cared by complete bedrest with binocular eye-pads until blood clot absorbed, and then discharged by wearing pin-hole-spectacle too. All cases were followed-up by every other day till the day of disappearance of chamber cellularity. The clinical results of this treatment and some points of controversy were reviewed and disc ussed.
Bed Rest
;
Busan
;
Contusions
;
Humans
;
Hyphema*
;
Korea
;
Male
;
Medical Records
;
Outpatients
;
Telescopes
7.A case of infectious mononucleosis.
Yong Jin AHN ; Hae Youp KIM ; Hyung Jin CHUNG ; Hyun Ho SHIN ; Dong Hee CHO
Korean Journal of Infectious Diseases 1991;23(3):189-193
No abstract available.
Infectious Mononucleosis*
8.Initiation Site of Ca2+ Entry Evoked by Endoplasmic Reticulum Ca2+ Depletion in Mouse Parotid and Pancreatic Acinar Cells.
Hae JO ; Hae Mi BYUN ; Syng Ill LEE ; Dong Min SHIN
Yonsei Medical Journal 2007;48(3):526-530
PURPOSE: In non-excitable cells, which include parotid and pancreatic acinar cells, Ca(2+) entry is triggered via a mechanism known as capacitative Ca(2+) entry, or store-operated Ca(2+) entry. This process is initiated by the perception of the filling state of endoplasmic reticulum (ER) and the depletion of internal Ca(2+) stores, which acts as an important factor triggering Ca(2+) entry. However, both the mechanism of store-mediated Ca(2+) entry and the molecular identity of store-operated Ca(2+) channel (SOCC) remain uncertain. MATERIALS AND METHODS: In the present study we investigated the Ca(2+) entry initiation site evoked by depletion of ER to identify the localization of SOCC in mouse parotid and pancreatic acinar cells with microfluorometeric imaging system. RESULTS: Treatment with thapsigargin (Tg), an inhibitor of sarco/endoplasmic reticulum Ca(2+)-ATPase, in an extracellular Ca(2+) free state, and subsequent exposure to a high external calcium state evoked Ca(2+) entry, while treatment with lanthanum, a non-specific blocker of plasma Ca(2+) channel, completely blocked Tg-induced Ca(2+) entry. Microfluorometric imaging showed that Tg-induced Ca(2+) entry started at a basal membrane, not a apical membrane. CONCLUSION: These results suggest that Ca2+ entry by depletion of the ER initiates at the basal pole in polarized exocrine cells and may help to characterize the nature of SOCC.
Animals
;
Calcium/*metabolism
;
Calcium Channels/drug effects/metabolism
;
Cells, Cultured
;
Endoplasmic Reticulum/drug effects/*metabolism
;
Mice
;
Mice, Inbred ICR
;
Microscopy, Fluorescence
;
Pancreas/cytology/drug effects/*metabolism
;
Parotid Gland/cytology/drug effects/*metabolism
;
Thapsigargin/pharmacology
9.Effects of Inositol 1,4,5-triphosphate on Osteoclast Differentiation in RANKL-induced Osteoclastogenesis.
Aran SON ; Min Seuk KIM ; Hae JO ; Hae Mi BYUN ; Dong Min SHIN
The Korean Journal of Physiology and Pharmacology 2012;16(1):31-36
The receptor activator of NF-kappaB ligand (RANKL) signal is an activator of tumor necrosis factor receptor-associated factor 6 (TRAF6), which leads to the activation of NF-kappaB and other signal transduction pathways essential for osteoclastogenesis, such as Ca2+ signaling. However, the intracellular levels of inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate (IP3) and IP3-mediated cellular function of RANKL during osteoclastogenesis are not known. In the present study, we determined the levels of IP3 and evaluated IP3-mediated osteoclast differentiation and osteoclast activity by RANKL treatment of mouse leukemic macrophage cells (RAW 264.7) and mouse bone marrow-derived monocyte/macrophage precursor cells (BMMs). During osteoclastogenesis, the expression levels of Ca2+ signaling proteins such as IP3 receptors (IP3Rs), plasma membrane Ca2+ ATPase, and sarco/endoplasmic reticulum Ca2+ ATPase type2 did not change by RANKL treatment for up to 6 days in both cell types. At 24 h after RANKL treatment, a higher steady-state level of IP3 was observed in RAW264.7 cells transfected with green fluorescent protein (GFP)-tagged pleckstrin homology (PH) domains of phospholipase C (PLC) delta, a probe specifically detecting intracellular IP3 levels. In BMMs, the inhibition of PLC with U73122 [a specific inhibitor of phospholipase C (PLC)] and of IP3Rs with 2-aminoethoxydiphenyl borate (2APB; a non-specific inhibitor of IP3Rs) inhibited the generation of RANKL-induced multinucleated cells and decreased the bone-resorption rate in dentin slice, respectively. These results suggest that intracellular IP3 levels and the IP3-mediated signaling pathway play an important role in RANKL-induced osteoclastogenesis.
Animals
;
Blood Proteins
;
Boron Compounds
;
Calcium-Transporting ATPases
;
Cell Membrane
;
Dentin
;
Estrenes
;
Inositol
;
Inositol 1,4,5-Trisphosphate
;
Inositol 1,4,5-Trisphosphate Receptors
;
Macrophages
;
Mice
;
NF-kappa B
;
Osteoclasts
;
Phosphoproteins
;
Proteins
;
Pyrrolidinones
;
Receptor Activator of Nuclear Factor-kappa B
;
Reticulum
;
Signal Transduction
;
Tumor Necrosis Factor-alpha
;
Type C Phospholipases
10.Prevalence of Tinea Pedis of College Students and Their Families in Taegu.
Hae Ook CHO ; Dong Hoon SHIN ; Jong Soo CHOI ; Ki Hong KIM ; Young Jun BANG ; Soon Bong SUH
Korean Journal of Dermatology 1997;35(1):114-120
BACKGROUND: Tinea pedis is one of the most comrnon dermatoses in the general population. But its prevalence in the general populat,ion was not yet reported in Korea. OBJECTIVE: Prevalence of tinea pedis and associated tinea unguium were checked in the general population. METHODS: Six hundred fifty eight persons from 179 families of the college students were evaluated. Clinical examinatior. for tinea pedis and onychomycosis and collecting scales from the suspicious lesions of the family members were perforrned by educated college students. Then dermatologists exarnined those specimens mycologically by KOH ~tnount and fungal culture. RESULTS: The results were as follows 1. The prevalence of tinea pedis was 41.2% in the studied 658 persons. 2. Among all 271 patients with tinea pedis, 201 strains of dermatophytes were isolated. They were 143 strains of Trichophyton(T) rubrum, 49 strains of T. mentagrophytes and 9 mixed infections of T. rubrum and T. mentagrophytes. In the co existence of i,inea pedis and tinea unguiurn, isolated species were corresponding. 3. Among 179 families, 143 families (79.9%) had at least one patient with tinea pedis. The isolated species of derrnatophytes in a farnily were one organism, 71.4% and two or more organisms, 28.6% of 77 familiys with more than one patient. CONCLUSION: In our study, the prevalence rate of tinea pedis was 41.2%. That suggests that tinea pedis is a wide spr .ad disease in healthy adult in Korea.
Adult
;
Arthrodermataceae
;
Coinfection
;
Daegu*
;
Humans
;
Korea
;
Onychomycosis
;
Prevalence*
;
Skin Diseases
;
Tinea Pedis*
;
Tinea*
;
Weights and Measures