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Hoffmann, R. A wiki for the life sciences where authorship matters. Nature Genetics (2008)
 
 
 
 
 

Diazacholesterol-induced ichthyosis in the hairless mouse. I. Morphologic, histochemical, and lipid biochemical characterization of a new animal model.

Several drugs that interfere with sterol metabolism have been associated with hyperkeratosis in man. We found that 20,25-diazacholesterol (30 to 60 mg/kg/day), administered to hairless mice that were otherwise given normal laboratory chow and water ad libitum, consistently produced ichthyosis after 6 to 9 weeks, an effect that was reversible with removal of drug or with coadministration of a high cholesterol diet. Scaling was most pronounced over the tail, but some stratum corneum retention was noted over the entire skin surface. As measured in frozen sections, stratum corneum thickness was three to 10 times thicker in treated animals than in either controls or revertants. Oil red O-stained frozen sections and freeze fracture replicas revealed decreased stratum corneum membrane lipids in the diazacholesterol-treated animals, but this finding was not specific, since a similar deficit was found in control and revertant tail stratum corneum but not in the stratum corneum from other sites. Stratum corneum lipid extracts revealed reduced total free sterols, reduced cholesterol, accumulation of several normally absent sterol precursors, and increased glycosphingolipids on thin-layer chromatography and high pressure liquid chromatography. In summary, we describe a syndrome of drug-induced ichthyosis in hairless mice that parallels the drug-induced syndrome in man. This syndrome is reversible and accompanied by distinctive abnormalities in cutaneous sterol metabolism. The diazacholesterol model may further our understanding of the pathogenesis of human keratinizing disorders and may provide a valuable analogue for testing new forms of therapy, such as retinoids, for scaling dermatoses.[1]

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