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1.
Vanilloid receptor subtype 1, VR1, is an ion channel that serves as a polymodal detector of pain-producing chemicals such as capsaicin and protons in primary afferent neurons. Here we showed that both capsaicin and acidification produced elevations in the intracellular Ca(2+) concentration ([Ca(2+)](i)) in cultured human epidermal keratinocytes. The capsaicin- and acidification-evoked increases in [Ca(2+)](i) were inhibited by capsazepine, an antagonist to VR1. VR1-like immunoreactivity was observed in the cells. These findings suggest that functional VR1-like protein is present and functions as a sensor against noxious chemical stimuli, such as capsaicin or acidification, in epidermal keratinocytes.  相似文献   

2.
Recently, two groups of cDNA clones have been isolated from human epidermal keratinocytes; the clones correspond to genes whose expression is stimulated by exposure of the cells to UV light or treatment with 4-nitroquinoline 1-oxide or 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol 13-acetate (T. Kartasova and P. van de Putte, Mol. Cell. Biol. 8:2195-2203, 1988). The proteins predicted by the nucleotide sequence of both groups of cDNAs are small (8 to 10 kilodaltons), are exceptionally rich in proline, glutamine, and cysteine, and contain repeating elements with a common sequence, PK PEPC. These proteins were designated sprI and sprII (small, proline rich). Here we describe the characterization of the sprIa protein, which is encoded by one of the group 1 cDNAs. The expression of this protein during keratinocyte differentiation in vitro and the distribution of the sprIa protein in some human tissues was studied by using a specific rabbit antiserum directed against a synthetic polypeptide corresponding to the 30 amino acids of the C-terminal region of the sprIa gene product. The results indicate that the expression of the sprIa protein is stimulated during keratinocyte differentiation both in vitro and in vivo.  相似文献   

3.
Growth factor receptors transmit biological signals for the stimulation of cell growth in vitro and in vivo and their autocrine stimulation may be involved in tumorigenesis. It is therefore, of great value to understand receptor reactions in response to ultraviolet (UV) light which certain normal human cells are invaribly exposed to during their growth cycle. UV irradiation has recently been shown to deplete antioxidant enzymes in human skin. The aims of the present study were a) to compare the lateral mobility of epidermal growth factor receptors (EGF-R) in cultured human keratinocytes and human foreskin fibroblasts, b) to investigate effects of ultraviolet B radiation on the mobility of EGF-R in these cells, and c) study the response of EGF-R on addition of antioxidant enzymes. The epidermal growth factor receptors were labeled with rhodaminated EGF, the lateral diffusion was determined and the fraction of mobile EGF-R assessed with the fluorescence recovery after photobleaching (FRAP). We found that human keratinocytes display a higher basal level of EGF-R mobility than human skin fibroblasts, viz. with diffusion coefficients (D ± standard error of the mean, SEM) of 4.2±0.2 × 10–10 cm2/s, and 1.8±0.2 × 10–10 cm2/s, respectively. UVB-irradiated fibroblasts showed an almost four-fold increase in the diffusion coefficient; D was 6.3±0.3 × 10–10 cm2/s. The keratinocytes, however, displayed no significant increase in receptor diffusion after irradiation; D was 5.1±0.8 × 10–10 cm2/s. In both cell types the percentage of EGF-R fluorescence recovery after photobleaching, i.e. the fraction of mobile receptors, was significantly increased after irradiation. In keratinocytes it increased from 69% before irradiation to 78% after irradiation. Analogous figures for fibroblasts were 61% and 73%. The effect of UVB on fibroblast receptors was abolished by prior addition of superoxide dismutase (SOD) and catalase (CAT). It is concluded that UVB radiation of fibroblasts and keratinocytes can affect their biophysical properties of EGF-R. The finding that addition of antioxidant enzymes prevented the UVB effect in fibroblasts may indicate the involvement of reactive oxygen metabolites.Abbreviations CAT Catalase - D Lateral diffusion coefficient - EDTA Ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid - EGF Epidermal growth factor - E-MEM Eagle's minimum essential medium - FCS Fetal calf serum - FRAP Fluorescence recovery after photobleaching - KRG Krebs-Ringer phosphate buffer - PBS Phosphate-buffered saline - R Mobile fraction - ROS Reactive oxygen species - SEM Standard error of the mean - SOD Superoxide dismutase - UVA Ultraviolet light-A (315-400 nm) - UVB Ultraviolet light-B (280-315 nm)  相似文献   

4.
Retinoids, vitamin A derivatives, are important regulators of the growth and differentiation of skin cells. Although retinoids are therapeutically used for several skin ailments, little is known about their effects on P2 receptors, known to be involved in various functions in the skin. DNA array analysis showed that treatment of normal human epidermal keratinocytes (NHEKs) with all-trans-retinoic acid (ATRA), an agonist to RAR (retinoic acid receptor), enhanced the expression of mRNA for the P2Y2 receptor, a metabotropic P2 receptor that is known to be involved in the proliferation of the epidermis. The expression of other P2 receptors in NHEKs was not affected by ATRA. ATRA increased the mRNA for the P2Y2 receptor in a concentration-dependent fashion (1 nM to 1 μM). Am80, a synthesized agonist to RAR, showed a similar enhancement, whereas 9-cis-retinoic acid (9-cisRA), an agonist to RXR (retinoid X receptor), enhanced P2Y2 gene expression to a lesser extent. Ca2+ imaging analysis showed that ATRA also increased the function of P2Y2 receptors in NHEKs. Retinoids are known to enhance the turnover of the epidermis by increasing both proliferation and terminal differentiation. The DNA microarray analysis also revealed that ATRA upregulates various genes involved in the differentiation of NHEKs. Our present results suggest that retinoids, at least in part, exert their proliferative effects by upregulating P2Y2 receptors in NHEKs. This effect of retinoids may be closely related to their therapeutic effect against various ailments or aging events in skins such as over-keratinization, pigmentation and re-modeling.  相似文献   

5.
We found that cultured human keratinocytes with high proliferative potential, the putative epidermal stem cells, expressed a higher level of noncadherin-associated beta-catenin than populations enriched for keratinocytes of lower proliferative potential. To investigate the physiological significance of this, a series of beta-catenin constructs was introduced into keratinocytes via retroviral infection. Full-length beta-catenin and a mutant containing only nine armadillo repeats had little effect on proliferative potential in culture, the full-length protein being rapidly degraded. However, expression of stabilised, N-terminally truncated beta-catenin increased the proportion of putative stem cells to almost 90% of the proliferative population in vitro without inducing malignant transformation, and relieved the differentiation stimulatory effect of overexpressing the E-cadherin cytoplasmic domain. Conversely, beta-catenin lacking armadillo repeats acted as a dominant negative mutant and stimulated exit from the stem cell compartment in culture. The positive and negative effects of the beta-catenin mutants on proliferative potential were independent of effects on cell-cycle kinetics, overt terminal differentiation or intercellular adhesion, and correlated with stimulation or inhibition of transactivation of a TCF/LEF reporter in basal keratinocytes. We conclude that the elevated level of cytoplasmic beta-catenin in those keratinocytes with characteristics of epidermal stem cells contributes to their high proliferative potential.  相似文献   

6.
Unlike cells cultured under physiological Ca2+ concentrations (1-2 mM), keratinocytes cultured in media containing Ca2+ in low concentrations (less than 0.1 mM) do not stratify. The latter cells also differ with respect to several features of the regulation of cholesterol synthesis. In keratinocytes cultured in medium containing high Ca2+ concentrations (1.6 mM) and fetal calf serum, the rate of cholesterol synthesis was 20-30 times higher than in keratinocytes exposed to a low Ca2+ concentration. The rate of cholesterol synthesis did not change when high-calcium cells were deprived of extracellular sources of cholesterol but increased (8-10 fold) in deprived low-calcium cells. Furthermore, the addition of low density lipoprotein (LDL) reduced cholesterol synthesis markedly in low-calcium cells but had no effect on high-calcium cells. Finally, in keratinocytes cultured at low calcium concentrations the association and degradation of 125I-LDL was 20-30 times higher than in keratinocytes cultured under high-calcium conditions. Switching of the cells from the low-calcium to the high-calcium medium resulted in the induction of terminal differentiation within 15 hours and was accompanied by increased cholesterol and protein synthesis, increased competence of cells to form cornified envelopes, and reduced association of 125I-LDL. A gradual increase of the extracellular Ca2+ concentration was accompanied by a corresponding increase of cholesterol and protein synthesis and a decrease of the response of intracellular cholesterol synthesis to changes in the extracellular concentrations of lipoprotein. Various morphological techniques showed virtually no binding and internalization of LDL by keratinocytes cultured at the high-calcium level, whereas both were observed at the low-calcium level. Once internalized, the LDL was delivered to dense bodies representing lysosomes. It is concluded that in human epidermal keratinocytes, the expression of the LDL receptor and the endogenous synthesis of cholesterol are regulated by the conditions determined by the differentiation stage of the cells.  相似文献   

7.
The epidermis is a multilayered squamous epithelium in which dividing basal cells withdraw from the cell cycle and progressively differentiate as they are displaced toward the skin surface. Eventually, the cells lose their nucleus and other organelles to become flattened squames, which are finally shed from the surface as bags of cross-linked keratin filaments enclosed in a cornified envelope [1]. Although keratinocytes can undergo apoptosis when stimulated by a variety of agents [2], it is not known whether their normal differentiation programme uses any components of the apoptotic biochemical machinery to produce the cornified cell. Differentiating keratinocytes have been reported to share some features with apoptotic cells, such as DNA fragmentation, but these features have not been seen consistently [3]. Apoptosis involves an intracellular proteolytic cascade, mainly mediated by members of the caspase family of cysteine proteases, which cleave one another and various key intracellular target proteins to kill the cell neatly and quickly [4]. Here, we show for the first time that caspases are activated during normal human keratinocyte differentiation and that this activation is apparently required for the normal loss of the nucleus.  相似文献   

8.
We studied the replication of keratinocytes in stratified squamous epithelia. Other studies have revealed functional and morphological heterogeneity in the replicating population of such cells. To examine possible kinetic heterogeneity, we determined the cell-cycle lengths of replicating cells in cultures of human epidermal keratinocytes. A double-label assay was developed, which measures the time between two successive cycles of DNA synthesis. The first cycle of DNA synthesis was marked by pulse labeling cultures for a brief period with 14C-thymidine (dThd), and the second cycle was detected by labeling at a later time with bromodeoxyuridine (BrdUrd). The time taken for the 14C-labeled DNA to become doubly labeled with BrdUrd was shown to correspond to the length of the cell cycle. In subconfluent cultures in which the cell number increased at an exponential rate, the average cell-cycle time was 21.5 h. In confluent cultures in which desquamation was balanced by cell renewal, the average cell cycle was 31.5 h. However, in confluent cultures, three populations of replicating cells were evident, these having cycle times of 22, 33, and 40 h. In subconfluent cultures, there was no clear evidence for cell-cycle heterogeneity of the replicating cells, although the most rapidly cycling cells in these cultures had a cycle time (16 h) considerably less than the most rapidly cycling cells in the confluent cultures (21 h). It is possible that the rapidly cycling cells seen in the subconfluent cultures were stem cells.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

9.
Kirfel G  Herzog V 《Protoplasma》2004,223(2-4):67-78
Summary. Keratinocytes are the prevalent cell type of the epidermis, a multilayered cornified epithelium which provides the cellular basis of the outermost barrier between the organism and its environment. By this barrier function the epidermis protects the organism against a variety of environmental hazards such as dehydration and mechanical stress. Under normal conditions, keratinocytes of all layers are interconnected by desmosomes and anchored by hemidesmosomes to a specialised type of extracellular matrix, the basement membrane. When the epidermis is injured, a vitally important response is initiated with the aim to restore the protective function of the epithelium. A fast but provisional sealing is achieved by the deposition of the fibrin clot before within 24 h after wounding keratinocytes from the wound margins begin to migrate into the wound bed, where they start to proliferate and to form the new epithelium. The development of new high-resolution assays for the study of cell migration and motility has potentiated major progress in our understanding of keratinocyte migration in vitro and in situ. The data reviewed here point to a sophisticated cooperation between soluble motogenic growth factors, cell–matrix interactions, and cell-to-cell communications as major parts of the machinery regulating keratinocyte migration.Correspondence and reprints: Institut für Zellbiologie, Universität Bonn, Ulrich-Haberland-Strasse 61a. 53121 Bonn. Federal Republic of Germany.  相似文献   

10.
11.
The metabolism of the receptor for epidermal growth factor (EGF) has been measured by labeling the receptor in vivo with radioactive amino acid precursors and then determining, by immunoprecipitation with specific anti-EGF receptor antisera, the rate of degradation of the receptor when the cells are placed in a nonradioactive medium. In human fibroblasts the rate of EGF receptor degradation (t1/2 = 10.1 h) was faster than the rate of degradation of total cell protein. When EGF was added to the nonradioactive medium, the half-life of prelabeled receptor was decreased to 1.2 h in human fibroblasts. These data demonstrate by direct analysis of receptor protein that during "down regulation" the EGF receptor is rapidly degraded. Enhanced receptor degradation was observed 5-10 min after the addition of EGF. The EGF-induced degradation of the receptor was blocked by methylamine, chloroquine, iodoacetate, or incubation at 25 degrees C. We have also shown that EGF-induced down regulation in human fibroblasts results in a decrease in the total amount of EGF receptor protein present. The amount of EGF receptor protein has been quantitated by radiolabeling cellular protein and immunoprecipitation of the receptor. The EGF receptor constitutes approximately 0.0035% of the cellular protein in human fibroblasts.  相似文献   

12.
Retinoylation (retinoic acid acylation) is a covalent modification of proteins occurring in a variety of eukaryotic cell lines. In this study, we found that proteins in undifferentiated and squamous-differentiated normal human epidermal keratinocytes were retinoylated after treatment with [3H]retinoic acid. The major retinoylated proteins were identified as cytokeratins based on their profile in two-dimensional gel electrophoresis and their immunoreactivity with anti-keratin monoclonal antibodies. The covalently bound [3H]retinoic acid was not removed by mild hydrolysis with methanolic-KOH indicating that it is not linked to the cytokeratins by a thioester bond. The results raise the possibility that retinoylation of cytokeratins is involved in some of the effects of retinoic acid on keratinocytes.  相似文献   

13.
14.
We have previously shown that peanut lectin (PNA) binding is a useful marker of keratinocyte terminal differentiation and have identified two PNA-binding glycoproteins with electrophoretic mobilities of approximately 250 kDa and 110 kDa [11]. We now report that in epidermis and stratified cultures of keratinocytes the binding patterns of PNA and the sialic acid-specific lectin Limax flavus agglutinin (LFA) are complementary, with LFA showing specificity for cells in the basal layer. LFA bound to the 250-kDa glycoprotein immunoprecipitated with an antiserum raised against the PNA-binding glycoproteins (anti PNA-gp), but not to the 110-kDa glycoprotein; it also bound additional high-molecular-weight material. These data suggest that the 250-kDa glycoprotein is expressed in the basal layer in a form with terminal sialic acid residues and suprabasally in a form with terminal galactose. LFA and anti-PNA-gp stained all cells in a range of cultured epithelial lines tested, whereas PNA stained only cells that had lost contact with the culture substratum, raising the possibility that loss of sialic acid residues is associated with stratification. Anti PNA-gp recognized glycoproteins of differing mobilities in these lines. Anti PNA-gp also stained epithelial cells in all tissues tested. In keratinocytes the PNA-binding glycoproteins were localised to the cell surface by immunoelectron microscopy; they were abundant on the microvilli and absent from desmosomal junctions. In conclusion, we have obtained further information about the nature of the PNA-binding glycoproteins in keratinocytes and related glycoproteins in other epithelial cell types.  相似文献   

15.
Reactive oxygen species (ROS) can cause severe damage to DNA, proteins and lipids in normal cells, contributing to carcinogenesis and various pathological conditions. While cellular senescence arrests the early phase of cell cycle without any detectable telomere loss or dysfunction. ROS is reported to contribute to induction of cellular senescence, as evidence by its premature onset upon treatment with antioxidants or inhibitors of cellular oxidant scavengers. Although cellular senescence is known to be implicated in tumor suppression, it remains unknown whether ROS initially contributed to be cellular senescence in normal human epidermal keratinocytes (NHEK) and their malignant counterparts. To clarify whether ROS induce cellular senescence in NHEKs, we examined the effect of hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) on the expression of cellular senescence-associated molecules in NHEKs, compared to in squamous carcinoma cells (SCCs). Hydrogen peroxide increased the number of cells positive in senescence associated-β-galactosidase (SA-β-Gal) activity in NHEKs, but not SCCs. The expression of cyclin-dependent kinase (CDK) inhibitors, especially p16INK4a was upregulated in NHEKs treated with H2O2. Interestingly, H2O2 suppressed the methylation of p16INK4a, promoter region in NHEKs, but not in SCCs. Hydrogen peroxide also suppressed the expression of phosphorylated Rb and CDK4, resulting in arrest in G0/G1 phase in NHEKs, but not SCCs.  相似文献   

16.
The Rac1 small GTP-binding protein is known to be involved in reorganization of the actin cytoskeleton and in regulation of intracellular signal transduction. The assembly and maintenance of cadherin-based cell cell junctions in epidermal keratinocytes is thought to be dependent on activity of Rac1. In this study we have generated green fluorescent protein (GFP)-tagged wild type, dominant negative and constitutively active Rac1 expression vectors and analyzed distribution of Rac1 following microinjection of human SCC12F epidermal keratinocytes. Wild type, dominant negative and constitutively active GFP Rac1 proteins distribute to sites of cell cell adhesion and co-localize with E-cadherin and the catenins. Disruption of cadherin-based junctions by reduction in extracellular calcium concentrations, or by use of antibodies to E-cadherin, results in redistribution of Rac1 away from sites of cell cell interaction but the co-localization with E-cadherin is maintained. In addition, expression of constitutively active GFP Rac1 results in formation of membrane ruffles on the apical surface of cells and intracellular vesicles. Interestingly, co-localization of Rac1 with E-cadherin is maintained in these structures. In contrast to previously published work we find that expression of dominant negative Rac1 neither disrupts cell cell adhesion nor prevents assembly of new cadherin-based adhesion structures.  相似文献   

17.
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20.
Heparin-binding growth factors are crucial for the formation of human epidermis, but little is known about the role of heparan sulfate proteoglycans in this process. Here we investigated the role of the heparan sulfate proteoglycan, perlecan, in the formation of human epidermis, by utilizing in vitro engineered human skin. By disrupting perlecan expression either in the dermis or the epidermis, we found that epidermally derived perlecan is essential for epidermal formation. Perlecan-deficient keratinocytes formed a strikingly thin and poorly organized epidermis because of premature apoptosis and failure to complete their stratification program. Exogenous perlecan fully restored epidermal formation. Perlecan deposition in the basement membrane zone correlated with formation of multilayered epidermis. Perlecan deficiency, however, had no effect on the lining and deposition of major basement membrane components as was evident by a continuous linear staining of laminin and collagen IV. Similarly, perlecan deficiency did not affect the distribution of beta1 integrin. Addition of the perlecan ligand, fibroblast growth factor 7, protected perlecan-deficient keratinocytes from cell death and improved the thickness of the epidermis. Taken together, our results revealed novel roles for perlecan in epidermal formation. Perlecan regulates both the survival and terminal differentiation steps of keratinocytes. Our results suggested a model whereby perlecan regulates these processes via controlling the bioavailability of perlecan-binding soluble factors involved in epidermal morphogenesis.  相似文献   

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