Could basement membrane alterations, resembling micro-wounds at the dermo-epidermal
junction in psoriatic non-lesional skin, make the skin susceptible to lesion formation?
Current data suggest that tissue microenvironment control immune functions. Therefore,
understanding the tissue environment in which immune activation occurs will enhance
our capability to interfere with abnormal immune pathology. Here, we argue that studying
the constitutively abnormal functions of clinically uninvolved psoriatic skin in patients
with plaque type psoriasis is very important to better understand psoriasis pathobiology,
because non-lesional skin provides the tissue environment in which the psoriatic lesion
develops. A key question in psoriasis is what initiates the abnormal, uncontrolled
immune activation in the first place and the answer may lie in the skin. In light
of this concept, we summarize abnormalities at the dermal-epidermal junction region
which shows a special "nonhealing-like" micro-wound phenotype in the psoriatic non-lesional
skin that may act as a crucial susceptibility factor in the development of the disease.