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1.
2.
Skin color results from the production and distribution of melanin in the epidermis. The protease‐activated receptor‐2 (PAR‐2), expressed on keratinocytes but not on melanocytes, is involved in melanosome uptake via phagocytosis, and modulation of PAR‐2 activation affects skin color. The pattern of melanosome distribution within the epidermis is skin color‐dependent. In vitro, this distribution pattern is regulated by the ethnic origin of the keratinocytes, not the melanocytes. Therefore, we hypothesized that PAR‐2 may play a role in the modulation of pigmentation in a skin type‐dependent manner. We examined the expression of PAR‐2 and its activator, trypsin, in human skins with different pigmentary levels. Here we show that PAR‐2 and trypsin are expressed in higher levels, and are differentially localized in highly pigmented, relative to lightly pigmented skins. Moreover, highly pigmented skins exhibit an increase in PAR‐2‐specific protease cleavage ability. Microsphere phagocytosis was more efficient in keratinocytes from highly pigmented skins, and PAR‐2 induced phagocytosis resulted in more efficient microsphere ingestion and more compacted microsphere organization in dark skin‐derived keratinocytes. These results demonstrate that PAR‐2 expression and activity correlate with skin color, suggesting the involvement of PAR‐2 in ethnic skin color phenotypes.  相似文献   

3.
The epidermal–melanin unit is composed of one melanocyte and approximately 36 neighboring keratinocytes, working in synchrony to produce and distribute melanin. Melanin is synthesized in melanosomes, transferred to the dendrite tips, and translocated into keratinocytes, forming caps over the keratinocyte nuclei. The molecular and cellular mechanisms involved in melanosome transfer and the keratinocyte–melanocyte interactions required for this process are not yet completely understood. Suggested mechanisms of melanosome transfer include melanosome release and endocytosis, direct inoculation (‘injection’), keratinocyte–melanocyte membrane fusion, and phagocytosis. Studies of the keratinocyte receptor protease‐activated receptor‐2 (PAR‐2) support the phagocytosis theory. PAR‐2 controls melanosome ingestion and phagocytosis by keratinocytes and exerts a regulatory role in skin pigmentation. Modulation of PAR‐2 activity can enhance or decrease melanosome transfer and affects pigmentation only when there is keratinocyte–melanocyte contact. Moreover, PAR‐2 is induced by UV irradiation and inhibition of PAR‐2 activation results in the prevention of UVB‐induced tanning. The role of PAR‐2 in mediating UV‐induced responses remains to be elucidated.  相似文献   

4.
Reconstructed pigmented epidermis was established by co‐seeding autologous melanocytes and keratinocytes onto a dermal substrate and culturing for up to 6 weeks at the air–liquid interface. Inspection of the tissue architecture revealed that melanocytes are regularly interspersed only in the basal layer and transfer melanosomes to the keratinocytes. We report for the first time, the in vitro formation of supranuclear melanin caps above the keratinocyte nuclei. The formation and abundance of these melanin caps could be enhanced by pigment modifiers such as ultraviolet light and 3‐isobutyl‐1‐methyl‐xanthine (IBMX). In untreated cultures, the capping was observed in the spinous layers after 6 weeks of culture, whereas after irradiation or supplementation of the culture medium with IBMX, the capping occurred already in the basal layer 2 weeks after initiation of the stimulus. In this study, we show that IBMX and ultraviolet irradiation stimulate pigmentation via different mechanisms. After supplementation of the culture medium with IBMX the increase in pigmentation was entirely due to the increase in melanocyte activity as observed by increased dendrite formation, melanin production and transport to the keratinocytes and was not due to an increase in melanocyte proliferation. In contrast, after UV irradiation, the increase in pigmentation was also accompanied with an increase in melanocyte proliferation as well as an increase in melanocyte activity. In conclusion, we describe the establishment of pigmented reconstructed epidermis with autologous keratinocytes and melanocytes that can be kept in culture for a period of at least 6 weeks. The complete program of melanogenesis occurs: melanosome synthesis, melanosome transport to keratinocytes, supranuclear capping of keratinocyte nuclei and tanning of the epidermis. This enables sustained application of pigment stimulators over a prolonged period of time and also repeated application of pigment stimulators to be studied.  相似文献   

5.
Several different in vivo and in vitro bioassays are used to evaluate melanosome transfer efficacy from melanocytes to keratinocytes. However, these methods are complicated and time consuming. Here, we report on a simple, rapid, direct, and reliable in vitro method for observing the process of melanosome transfer from melanocytes to keratinocytes. First, we selected and tested a melanoma cell line RPMI-7951 that can normally synthesize melanin and transfer from mature melanosomes to keratinocytes in vitro. We cocultured these cells with a human ovarian teratoma transformed epidermal carcinoma cell line, which is also capable of accepting melanosomes transferred from melanocytes, as in normal keratinocytes. The cells were cocultured for 24-72 h and double labeled with FITC-conjugated antibody against the melanosome-associated protein TRP-1, and with Cy5-conjugated antibody against the keratinocyte-specific marker keratin 14. The cells were examined by fluorescence microscope and flow cytometry. Melanosome transfer from melanocytes to keratinocytes increased in a time-dependent manner. To verify the accessibility of this method, the melanosome transfer inhibitor, a serine protease inhibitor, 4-(2-aminoethyl) benzenesulfonyl fluoride hydrochloride, and a melanosome transfer stimulator, alpha-melanocyte-stimulating hormone, were added. The serine protease inhibitor decreased melanosome transfer, and alpha-melanocyte-stimulating hormone increased melanosome transfer, in a dose-dependent manner. In conclusion, this is a simple, rapid, and effective model system to quantify the melanosome transfer efficacy from melanocytes to keratinocytes in vitro.  相似文献   

6.
There are many techniques for evaluating melanosome transfer to keratinocytes but the spectrophotometric quantification of melanosomes incorporated by keratinocyte phagocytosis has not been previously reported. Here we describe a new method that allows the spectrophotometric visualization of melanosome uptake by normal human keratinocytes in culture. Fontana-Masson staining of keratinocytes incubated with isolated melanosomes showed the accumulation of incorporated melanosomes in the perinuclear areas of keratinocytes within 48 h. Electron microscopic observations of melanosomes ingested by keratinocytes revealed that many phagosomes containing clusters of melanosomes or their fragments were localized in the perinuclear area. A known inhibitor of keratinocyte phagocytosis which inhibits protease-activated receptor-2, i.e., soybean trypsin inhibitor, decreased melanosome uptake by keratinocytes in a dose-dependent manner. These data suggest that our method is a useful model to quantitate keratinocyte phagocytosis of melanosomes visually in vitro.  相似文献   

7.
We propose that some of the critical molecules involved in the transfer of melanosomes from melanocytes to keratinocytes include plasma membrane lectins and their glycoconjugates. To investigate this mechanism, co‐cultures of human melanocytes and keratinocytes derived from neonatal foreskins were established. The process of melanosome transfer was assessed by two experimental procedures. The first involved labeling melanocyte cultures with the fluorochrome CFDA. Labeled melanocytes were subsequently co‐cultured with keratinocytes, and the transfer of fluorochrome assessed visually by confocal microscopy and quantitatively by flow cytometry. The second investigative approach involved co‐culturing melanocytes with keratinocytes, and processing the co‐cultures after 3 days for electron microscopy to quantitate the numbers of melanosomes in keratinocytes. Results from these experimental approaches indicate significant transfer of dye or melanosomes from melanocytes to keratinocytes that increased with time of co‐culturing. Using these model systems, we subsequently tested a battery of lectins and neoglycoproteins for their effect in melanosome transfer. Addition of these selected molecules to co‐cultures inhibited transfer of fluorochrome by approximately 15–44% as assessed by flow cytometry, and of melanosomes by 67–93% as assessed by electron microscopy. Therefore, our results suggest the roles of selected lectins and glycoproteins in melanosome transfer to keratinocytes in the skin.  相似文献   

8.
To gain insight for the role of mast cell‐produced heparin in the regulation of epidermal homeostasis and skin pigmentation, we have investigated the effect of heparin on melanosome uptake and proinflammatory responses in normal human epidermal keratinocytes (NHEKs). We quantified phagocytic activity of NHEKs with uptake of melanosomes or fluorescent microspheres. Heparin exhibited the inhibitory effect on keratinocyte phagocytosis through blocking PI3k/Akt and MEK/ERK signaling pathways. In fact, the heparin‐treated NHEKs showed impaired activation of Akt and ERK during phagocytosis, whereas PI3k and MEK inhibitors significantly suppressed melanosome uptake by NHEKs. In addition, the inflammation marker cycloxygenase‐2 (COX‐2) expression and prostaglandin E2 (PGE2) production were induced during phagocytosis, while these effects were downregulated in the presence of heparin. Our observations suggest that heparin may play an antiphagocytic and anti‐inflammation role in epidermis of human skin.  相似文献   

9.
Human skin hyperpigmentation disorders occur when the synthesis and/or distribution of melanin increases. The distribution of melanin in the skin is achieved by melanosome transport and transfer. The transport of melanosomes, the organelles where melanin is made, in a melanocyte precedes the transfer of the melanosomes to a keratinocyte. Therefore, hyperpigmentation can be regulated by decreasing melanosome transport. In this study, we found that an extract of Saururus chinensis Baill (ESCB) and one of its components, manassantin B, inhibited melanosome transport in Melan‐a melanocytes and normal human melanocytes (NHMs). Manassantin B disturbed melanosome transport by disrupting the interaction between melanophilin and myosin Va. Manassantin B is neither a direct nor an indirect inhibitor of tyrosinase. The total melanin content was not reduced when melanosome transport was inhibited in a Melan‐a melanocyte monoculture by manassantin B. Manassantin B decreased melanin content only when Melan‐a melanocytes were co‐cultured with SP‐1 keratinocytes or stimulated by α‐MSH. Therefore, we propose that specific inhibitors of melanosome transport, such as manassantin B, are potential candidate or lead compounds for the development of agents to treat undesirable hyperpigmentation of the skin.  相似文献   

10.
Striking differences are observed in the melanogenic response of normal human melanocytes to UVA and UVB irradiation depending on culture conditions and the presence of keratinocytes. Exposure of melanocytes co‐cultured with keratinocytes to UVB irradiation triggered, already at low doses (5 mJ/cm2), an increase in melanin synthesis whereas in melanocyte mono‐cultures, UVB doses up to 50 mJ/cm2 had no melanogenic effect. Unlike UVB, UVA exposure caused the same melanogenic response in both mono‐ and co‐cultures. Removing certain keratinocyte growth factors from the co‐culture medium abolished the melanogenic response to UVB, but not to UVA exposure. When integrated into the basal layer of a reconstructed human epidermis, human melanocytes similarly reacted to UVA and UVB irradiation as in vivo by increasing their production and transfer of melanin to the neighboring keratinocytes which resulted in a noticeable tanning of the reconstructed epidermis. The presence of a dense stratum corneum, known to scatter and absorb UV light, is responsible for higher minimal UVB and UVA doses required to trigger a melanogenic response in the reconstructed epidermis compared to keratinocyte–melanocyte co‐cultures. Furthermore, an immediate tanning response was observed in the pigmented epidermis following UVA irradiation. From these results we conclude that: (i) keratinocytes play an important role in mediating UVB‐induced pigmentation, (ii) UVA‐induced pigmentation is the result of a rather direct effect on melanocytes and (iii) reconstructed pigmented epidermis is the most appropriate model to study UV‐induced pigmentation in vitro.  相似文献   

11.
Reconstructed pigmented epidermis was established by co-seeding autologous melanocytes and keratinocytes onto a dermal substrate and culturing for up to 6 weeks at the air-liquid interface. Inspection of the tissue architecture revealed that melanocytes are regularly interspersed only in the basal layer and transfer melanosomes to the keratinocytes. We report for the first time, the in vitro formation of supranuclear melanin caps above the keratinocyte nuclei. The formation and abundance of these melanin caps could be enhanced by pigment modifiers such as ultraviolet light and 3-isobutyl-1-methyl-xanthine (IBMX). In untreated cultures, the capping was observed in the spinous layers after 6 weeks of culture, whereas after irradiation or supplementation of the culture medium with IBMX, the capping occurred already in the basal layer 2 weeks after initiation of the stimulus. In this study, we show that IBMX and ultraviolet irradiation stimulate pigmentation via different mechanisms. After supplementation of the culture medium with IBMX the increase in pigmentation was entirely due to the increase in melanocyte activity as observed by increased dendrite formation, melanin production and transport to the keratinocytes and was not due to an increase in melanocyte proliferation. In contrast, after UV irradiation, the increase in pigmentation was also accompanied with an increase in melanocyte proliferation as well as an increase in melanocyte activity. In conclusion, we describe the establishment of pigmented reconstructed epidermis with autologous keratinocytes and melanocytes that can be kept in culture for a period of at least 6 weeks. The complete program of melanogenesis occurs: melanosome synthesis, melanosome transport to keratinocytes, supranuclear capping of keratinocyte nuclei and tanning of the epidermis. This enables sustained application of pigment stimulators over a prolonged period of time and also repeated application of pigment stimulators to be studied.  相似文献   

12.
13.
We propose that some of the critical molecules involved in the transfer of melanosomes from melanocytes to keratinocytes include plasma membrane lectins and their glycoconjugates. To investigate this mechanism, co-cultures of human melanocytes and keratinocytes derived from neonatal foreskins were established. The process of melanosome transfer was assessed by two experimental procedures. The first involved labeling melanocyte cultures with the fluorochrome CFDA. Labeled melanocytes were subsequently co-cultured with keratinocytes, and the transfer of fluorochrome assessed visually by confocal microscopy and quantitatively by flow cytometry. The second investigative approach involved co-culturing melanocytes with keratinocytes, and processing the co-cultures after 3 days for electron microscopy to quantitate the numbers of melanosomes in keratinocytes. Results from these experimental approaches indicate significant transfer of dye or melanosomes from melanocytes to keratinocytes that increased with time of co-culturing. Using these model systems, we subsequently tested a battery of lectins and neoglycoproteins for their effect in melanosome transfer. Addition of these selected molecules to co-cultures inhibited transfer of fluorochrome by approximately 15-44% as assessed by flow cytometry, and of melanosomes by 67-93% as assessed by electron microscopy. Therefore, our results suggest the roles of selected lectins and glycoproteins in melanosome transfer to keratinocytes in the skin.  相似文献   

14.
The present study reports the results of a morpho‐functional analysis of spleen pigmented cells from Rana esculenta L. and comparison with liver melanin‐synthesizing cells, belonging to the macrophage cell lineage. Cytological and cytochemical analyses show that parenchymal pigmented cells of the spleen, like those of the liver, are positive to peroxidase and lipase reactions and have phagocytic properties. The observation of premelanosomes in various stages of differentiation, together with the demonstration of dopa oxidase activity in the melanosome proteins, indicate that spleen pigmented macrophages have endogenous melanogenic ability as do liver pigmented macrophages. Attempts to demonstrate tyrosine‐hydroxylase activity in melanosome protein extracts from frog spleen and liver, using the same protocol as for mammalian tyrosinases, gave negative results. As regards the dopa oxidase activity revealed, some of its properties differ from the typical behaviour observed for tyrosinases from different sources. Peroxidase activity is shown in spleen and liver melanosome proteins with p‐phenylenediamine‐pyrocatechol (PPD‐PC), and not with typical peroxidase substrates. Suitable inhibition tests revealed that dopa oxidase and peroxidase activities might be supported by two different proteins. Liver melanosome extracts display a very strong laccase (dimethoxyphenol‐oxidase) activity but spleen extracts do not. Differences observed in the enzymatic properties of the spleen and liver melanosomes suggest that pigmented macrophages may undergo tissue‐specific differentiation. These preliminary data show that the melanin pathway of pigmented macrophages is different from that of melanocytes and may pave the way to identification of a new melanogenic pathway in vertebrates.  相似文献   

15.
To study pigmentation, we have reconstructed an epidermis ex vivo with keratinocytes and melanocytes. Keratinocytes and melanocytes were grown first in primary cocultures and separately in secondary cultures, then seeded on a dead deepidermized dermis (Pruniéras type) at a 1:20 melanocyte/keratinocyte ratio. Reconstructed epidermis were grown in a special medium enriched with calcium and fetal bovine serum lifted for 15 days at the air-liquid interface. Using histology, immunohistochemistry and electron microscopy we have shown an excellent level of differentiation of the reconstructed epidermis and a physiologic distribution of dendritic melanocytes in the basal layer capable of melanosome transfer to keratinocytes. UVB irradiation 0.15 J/cm2× 5 consecutive days increased melanocyte numbers and stimulated pigmentation as evidenced macroscopically and microscopically and at the biochemical level. Following UVB irradiation melanosome transfer was markedly increased and isolated or clumps of melanosomes were seen in the basal layers as well as in the stratum corneum. This model allows the study of the physiology of pigmentation ex vivo.  相似文献   

16.
Expression profiles revealed miR‐1299 downregulation concomitant with arginase‐2 (ARG2) upregulation in hyperpigmented skin of melasma patients. Opposite regulation of tyrosinase and PMEL17 by miR‐1299 and inverse relationship between miR‐1299 and ARG2 expression denoted a role of miR‐1299 in pigmentation with ARG2 as a miR‐1299 target. ARG2 overexpression or knock‐down in keratinocytes, the main source of ARG2 in epidermis, positively regulated tyrosinase and PMEL17 protein levels, but not mRNA levels or melanosome transfer. ARG2 overexpression in keratinocytes reduced autophagy equivalent to 3‐MA, an autophagy inhibitor which also increased tyrosinase and PMEL17 protein levels, whereas ARG2 knock‐down induced opposite results. Autophagy inducer rapamycin reduced ARG2‐increased tyrosinase and PMEL17 protein levels. Also, autophagy was reduced in late passage‐induced senescent keratinocytes showing ARG2 upregulation. ARG2, but not 3‐MA, stimulated keratinocyte senescence. These results suggest that ARG2 reduces autophagy in keratinocytes by stimulating cellular senescence, resulting in skin pigmentation by reducing degradation of transferred melanosomes.  相似文献   

17.
Melanocytes account for approximately 5–10% percent of the cells in adult epidermis. Unlike the ectodermally derived keratinocytes, they originate in the neural crest and migrate into the epidermis early in development. There has been an interest in melanocytes in developing human skin since the late 1800s, when concentrated pigmented cells were identified in the sacro-coccygeal skin of Japanese fetuses. This observation led to speculation and subsequent investigation about the racial nature of the melanocytes in this site (the Mongolian spot), the presence of melanocytes in fetuses of other races, the timing of appearance of these cells in both the dermis and epidermis, and their origin. The early investigators relied primarily on histochemical methods that stained either the premelanosome or the pigmented melanosome, or relied upon the activity of tyrosinase within the melanosome to effect the DOPA reaction. Studies by electron microscopy added further documentation to the presence of melanocytes in the skin by resolving the structure of the melanosome regardless of its state of pigmentation. All of these methods recognized, however, only differentiated melanocytes. The thorough investigations of melanocytes in the skin from a large number of black embryos and fetuses by Zimmerman and colleagues between 1948 and 1955 provided insight into the time of appearance of melanocytes in the dermis (10–11 weeks' menstrual age) and the epidermis (11–12 weeks) and revealed the density of these cells in both zones of the skin of several regions of the body. The precise localization of the melanocytes in the developing hair follicles was contributed by the studies of Mishima and Widlan (J Invest Dermatol 1966; 46:263–277). More recently, monoclonal antibodies have been developed that recognize common oncofetal or oncodifferentiation antigens on the surface or in the cytoplasm of melanoma cells and developing melanocytes (but not normal adult melanocytes). These antibodies recognize the cells irrespective of the presence or absence of melanosomes or their activity in the synthesis of pigment and therefore are valuable tools for re-examining the presence, density, and distribution patterns of melanocytes in developing human skin. Using one of these antibodies (HMB-45), it was found that dendritic melanocytes are present in the epidermis between 40 and 50 days estimated gestational age in a density comparable with that of newborn epidermis and are distributed in relatively non-random patterns. A number of questions about the influx of cells into the epidermis, potential reservoirs of melanoblasts retained within the dermis, division of epidermal melanocytes, and the interaction of melanocytes and keratinocytes during development remain unresolved. The tools now appear to be available, however, to begin to explore many of these questions.  相似文献   

18.
Alibardi, L. 2012. Cytology and localization of chromatophores in the skin of the Tuatara (Sphenodon punctaus). —Acta Zoologica (Stockholm) 93 : 330–337. The study deals with skin pigmentation in the reptile Sphenodon punctatus where neither strong colors nor rapid color changes are present. Dark areas of the skin derive from an intense pigmentation of beta‐keratinocytes of the epidermis. Only epidermal melanocytes are involved in the process of melanosome transfer into keratinocytes. The basement membrane is a structural boundary separating melanocytes from melanophores that are sparse or concentrated in some dermal areas where they contribute to the dark coloration of the skin. In these regions, dermal melanophores give rise to the dark dots or to the irregular spots or to the dark stripes present in the skin. Ultrastructurally only eu‐melanosomes are present, although only molecular studies can detect whether also pheomelanins are synthesized in these organelles. Chromatophores are not organized in functional dermal melanophore units. Xantophores are distributed under the epidermis and store lipid‐containing droplets or lamellated pterinosomes. Their specific yellow‐orange hues become evident on the skin surface. Iridophores are generally localized among the melanosomes and form reflecting platelets that are derived form the endoplasmic reticulum and probably are also elaborated in the Golgi apparatus. The role in color production of the latter cells in the skin remains to be identified.  相似文献   

19.
Skin color results from the production and distribution of melanin in the epidermis. The protease-activated receptor-2 (PAR-2), expressed on keratinocytes but not on melanocytes, is involved in melanosome uptake via phagocytosis, and modulation of PAR-2 activation affects skin color. The pattern of melanosome distribution within the epidermis is skin color-dependent. In vitro, this distribution pattern is regulated by the ethnic origin of the keratinocytes, not the melanocytes. Therefore, we hypothesized that PAR-2 may play a role in the modulation of pigmentation in a skin type-dependent manner. We examined the expression of PAR-2 and its activator, trypsin, in human skins with different pigmentary levels. Here we show that PAR-2 and trypsin are expressed in higher levels, and are differentially localized in highly pigmented, relative to lightly pigmented skins. Moreover, highly pigmented skins exhibit an increase in PAR-2-specific protease cleavage ability. Microsphere phagocytosis was more efficient in keratinocytes from highly pigmented skins, and PAR-2 induced phagocytosis resulted in more efficient microsphere ingestion and more compacted microsphere organization in dark skin-derived keratinocytes. These results demonstrate that PAR-2 expression and activity correlate with skin color, suggesting the involvement of PAR-2 in ethnic skin color phenotypes.  相似文献   

20.
The ultrastructure of the testosterone dependent epidermal melanocyte system of the scrotal skin of normals and castrates, with and without testosterone replacement therapy, and UVL-B (280-315 nm) radiation in black Long Evans rats is reported. UVL-B increases melanocyte activity, melanosome forming apparatus, (size of Golgi zone and RER, and quantity of cytoplasmic vesicles, dendrites, and stages of melanosomes) in normals and in castrates. Testosterone replacement therapy to castrates is not a prerequisite for stimulation by UVL-B, but it enhances the effects of UVL-B without restoring normalcy as melanosome packaging into complexes predominates. After UVL-B stimulation of normals or castrates, melanocyte dendrites are observed more often. Melanocyte dendrites of skin of castrated rats are observed less often than in normals, but with testosterone replacement therapy, the dendrites become more numerous. Melanosomes donated to keratinocytes are mostly located as singles in normals and as complexes in castrates. After UVL-B, castration, or testosterone replacement therapy, the melanosomes are packaged in keratinocytes in complexes larger than in normals. In the epidermis of long term castrates (9-109 days), non-specific clear cells are observed and Langerhans cells containing melanosomes; we did not observe them in normals. Melanocytes of castrates have a reduced melanosome forming apparatus. The dermis of castrates contains many dermal melanocytes in the superficial dermis with melanosomes in several stages of formation. These cells are not apparent in normals at this location in the dermis. Testosterone replacement therapy and/or UVL-B administered to castrates does not restore the epidermal melanocyte system nor the dermis to precastration ultrastructural appearance; castration has a permanent altering effect as melanosomes are packaged into complexes.  相似文献   

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