Biomolecules & Biomedicine (May 2007)

Tissue Angiotensin-Converting Enzyme in Patients With Various Clinical Forms of Psoriasis

  • Jasminko Huskić,
  • Faruk Alendar

DOI
https://doi.org/10.17305/bjbms.2007.3061
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 2

Abstract

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Tissue angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) was measured in 60 patients with psoriasis and in 20 healthy individuals. According to clinical forms of psoriasis, patients were further divided into three groups: psoriasis with solitary lesions (n=20), psoriasis with multiple disseminated lesions (n=20) and erythrodermic psoriasis (n=20). The tissue ACE activity was determined before and after therapy, by the spectrophotometric method using hippuryl-l-his-tidyl-l-leucine as a substrate. The enzyme activity is expressed in units: 1 U corresponds to 1 nmol of hippuric acid released by hydrolysis of hippuryl-l-histidyl-l-leucine per minute and 50 mg of the tissue. Before therapy, tissue ACE activity was significantly increased in patients with psoriasis (4,14±0,34; X±SEM) in comparison to healthy individuals (1,86±0,16). The greatest increase in tissue ACE activity was observed in patients with erythrodermic psoriasis (4,72±0,65), followed by those with multiple disseminated lesions (4,24±0,63) and solitary psoriatic lesions (3,47±0,48). After therapy, serum ACE activity was significantly decreased in all clinical forms of the disease. Determination of tissue ACE activity might be a good nonspecific parameter for assessment therapeutic effects.

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