Clinical and Diagnostic Laboratory Immunology, January 1999, p. 101-104, Vol. 6, No. 1
1071-412X/99/$04.00+0
Copyright © 1999, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Department of Dermatology,
Received 20 January 1998/Returned for modification 24 March
1998/Accepted 5 November 1998
A marked decrease in the content of ceramide has been reported in
the horny layer of the epidermis in atopic dermatitis (AD). This
decrease impairs the permeability barrier of the epidermis, resulting
in the characteristic dry and easily antigen-permeable skin of AD,
since ceramide serves as the major water-holding molecule in the
extracellular space of the horny layer. On the other hand, the skin of
such patients is frequently colonized by bacteria, most typically by
Staphylococcus aureus, possessing genes such as those for
sphingomyelinase, which are related to sphingolipid metabolism. We
therefore tried to identify a possible correlation between the ceramide
content and the bacterial flora obtained from the skin of 25 patients
with AD versus that of 24 healthy subjects, using a thin-layer
chromatographic assay of the sphingomyelin-associated enzyme activities
secreted from the bacteria. The findings of the assay demonstrated that
ceramidase, which breaks ceramide down into sphingosine and fatty acid,
was secreted significantly more from the bacterial flora obtained from
both the lesional and the nonlesional skin of patients with AD than
from the skin of healthy subjects; sphingomyelinase, which breaks
sphingomyelin down into ceramide and phosphorylcholine, was secreted
from the bacterial flora obtained from all types of skin at similar
levels for the patients with AD and the healthy controls. The finding that the skin of patients with AD is colonized by ceramidase-secreting bacteria thus suggests that microorganisms are related to the deficiency of ceramide in the horny layer of the epidermis, which increases the hypersensitivity of skin in AD patients by impairing the
permeability barrier.
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Department of
Dermatology, Faculty of Medicine, Kyushu University, Fukuoka 812-8582, Japan. Phone: (81) 92 642 5588. Fax: (81) 92 642 5600. E-mail: imayama{at}dermatol.med.kyushu-u.ac.jp.
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