Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Increased cytokeratin in dog footpads infected with distemper virus
By Grone, Andrea et al.·Published in Veterinary dermatology·2004·Institut fü, Germany·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Up-regulation of cytokeratin expression in canine distemper virus-infected canine footpad epidermis.
- Species:
- dog
Plain-English summary
A group of dogs infected with canine distemper virus (CDV) showed changes in their footpad skin cells. Researchers found that the skin cells had higher levels of certain proteins, which are important for skin health, compared to dogs that were not infected. This suggests that the presence of CDV in the footpad skin may lead to increased skin cell activity. However, the exact impact of these changes on the dogs' health needs more research.
People also search for: dog distemper symptoms · canine footpad skin problems · treatment for dog skin infections
Abstract
Cytokeratin expression was assessed in footpad epidermis from dogs using immunohistochemistry. Four groups of dogs were studied: dogs with experimentally induced distemper and with canine distemper virus (CDV) in footpad epidermis (group 1, n = 7); dogs with experimentally induced distemper and without CDV in footpad epidermis (group 2, n = 4); inoculated dogs without distemper and without CDV in the footpad epidermis (group 3, n = 8), and noninoculated dogs without distemper (group 4, n = 2). No increase in thickness of the footpad epidermis was present in any of these groups. Sections of metacarpal or metatarsal pads were stained for cytokeratin (CK)14 (proliferation-associated), CK10 (correlated with early differentiation), and for involucrin (associated with terminal differentiation). CK14 was present in basal keratinocytes of all groups, but staining intensity decreased towards the corneal layer in groups 2-4, but not in group 1. CK10 was present in the spinous and granular layer of all groups, but staining of the granular layer was much stronger in group 1. Involucrin was present in the granular layer of footpads of group 1 and only in the upper part of this layer in groups 2-4. The results demonstrate increased staining intensity and/or wider distribution within the footpad epidermis in group 1 dogs when compared to the other groups. This was interpreted as up-regulation in expression of these proteins. These findings suggest that presence of CDV antigen and mRNA in footpad epidermis was associated with an increase in expression of CK14, CK10 and involucrin. The potential role of this up-regulation in cytokeratin expression in the development of CDV-induced digital hyperkeratosis remains speculative at the moment and requires further studies.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/15214953/