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1.
The fate of dendritic cells (DCs) after Ag presentation may be DC subset-specific and controlled by many factors. The role of activation-induced apoptosis in regulating DC function is not clear. We investigated the fate of cutaneous DCs (cDCs), specifically Langerhans cells (LCs), and observed that they undergo apoptosis after successful Ag presentation to CD4 T cells. Caspase-specific inhibitors revealed that LC lines use a type II apoptosis pathway in response to CD4 T cells. In support of this, BH3-interacting domain (Bid) protein was present at high levels and specifically cleaved in the presence of Ag-specific T cells. Significant resistance to apoptosis by OT-2 CD4 cells was also observed for Bid knockout (KO) LCs in vitro. To test whether Bid was required to regulate LC function in vivo, we measured contact sensitization and topical immunization responses in Bid KO mice and observed markedly enhanced ear swelling and proliferation responses compared with wild-type mice. Furthermore, when Ag-pulsed Bid KO migratory cDCs were inoculated into wild-type recipients, an increase in both the rate and percentage of expanded OT-2 T cells expressing IFN-gamma was observed. Thus, enhanced Ag presentation function was intrinsic to Bid KO cDCs. Therefore, Bid is an important regulator of LC viability and Ag presentation function.  相似文献   

2.
The UV radiation in sunlight is the primary cause of skin cancer. UV is also immunosuppressive and numerous studies have shown that UV-induced immune suppression is a major risk factor for skin cancer induction. Previous studies demonstrated that dermal mast cells play a critical role in the induction of immune suppression. Mast cell-deficient mice are resistant to the immunosuppressive effects of UV radiation, and UV-induced immune suppression can be restored by injecting bone marrow-derived mast cells into the skin of mast cell- deficient mice. The exact process however, by which mast cells contribute to immune suppression, is not known. In this study, we show that one of the first steps in the induction of immune suppression is mast cell migration from the skin to the draining lymph nodes. UV exposure, in a dose-dependent manner, causes a significant increase in lymph node mast cell numbers. When GFP(+) skin was grafted onto mast cell-deficient mice, we found that GFP(+) mast cells preferentially migrated into the lymph nodes draining the skin. The mast cells migrated primarily to the B cell areas of the draining nodes. Mast cells express CXCR4(+) and UV exposure up-regulated the expression of its ligand CXCL12 by lymph node B cells. Treating UV-irradiated mice with a CXCR4 antagonist blocked mast cell migration and abrogated UV-induced immune suppression. Our findings indicate that UV-induced mast cell migration to draining lymph nodes, mediated by CXCR4 interacting with CXCL12, represents a key early step in UV-induced immune suppression.  相似文献   

3.
UV radiation induces skin cancer primarily by its DNA-damaging properties, but also by its capacity to suppress the immune system. The photoisomer of urocanic acid (UCA), cis-UCA, is an important mediator of UV-induced immunosuppression and is involved in the inhibition of tumor immunity. The immunomodulatory cytokine IL-12 is known to counteract many of the immunosuppressive effects of UV radiation, including UV-induced immune tolerance. In this study, we addressed whether IL-12 also reverts the immunosuppressive activities of cis-UCA. Cis-UCA inhibits the ability of Langerhans cells to present tumor Ags for primary and secondary tumor immune responses. IL-12 treatment completely prevented the suppression by cis-UCA. IL-12 also protected mice from cis-UCA-induced suppression of contact hypersensitivity responses. To study the effects of cis-UCA on Ag-processing and Ag-presenting function in vitro, Langerhans cells were treated with UCA isomers and incubated with OVA or OVA peptide(323-339) before exposure to OVA-specific transgenic T cells. Cis-, but not trans-UCA suppressed Ag presentation, which was completely reversed upon addition of IL-12. Since these findings suggest that cis-UCA may play an important role in photocarcinogenesis by inhibiting a tumor immune response, mice were chronically UVB irradiated to induce skin cancer. Whereas all mice in the control groups developed tumors, mice treated with a mAb with specificity for cis-UCA showed a significantly reduced tumor incidence. These data strongly indicate the importance of cis-UCA during photocarcinogenesis and support the concept of counteracting cis-UCA as an alternative strategy to prevent UV-induced skin cancer, possibly via the application of IL-12.  相似文献   

4.
Hapten sensitization through UV-exposed skin induces systemic immune suppression, which is experimentally demonstrated by inhibition of contact hypersensitivity (CHS). Although this UV-induced effect has been shown to be mediated by inhibition of the afferent phase of the CHS, the UV effects on the efferent (elicitation) phase remain unknown. In this study, UV effects on endothelial ICAM-1 expression at elicitation sites were first examined. Mice were sensitized by hapten application onto UV-exposed back skin, and ears were challenged 5 days later. ICAM-1 up-regulation at nonirradiated elicitation sites following hapten challenge was eliminated by UV exposure on sensitization sites distant from elicitation sites. To assess whether loss of the ICAM-1 up-regulation at elicitation sites contributed to UV-induced immunosuppression, we examined CHS responses in UV-exposed ICAM-1-deficient (ICAM-1(-/-)) mice that genetically lacked the ICAM-1 up-regulation. ICAM-1(-/-) mice exhibited reduced CHS responses without UV exposure, but UV exposure did not further reduce CHS responses in ICAM-1(-/-) mice. Furthermore, ICAM-1 deficiency did not affect the afferent limb, because ICAM-1(-/-) mice had normal generation of hapten-specific suppressor and effector T cells. This UV-induced immunosuppression was associated with a lack of TNF-alpha production after Ag challenge at elicitation sites. Local TNF-alpha injection before elicitation abrogated the UV-induced CHS inhibition with increased endothelial ICAM-1 expression. TNF-alpha production at elicitation sites was down-regulated by IL-10, a possible mediator produced by hapten-specific suppressor T cells that are generated by UV exposure. These results indicate that UV exposure inhibits CHS by abrogating up-regulation of endothelial ICAM-1 expression after Ag challenge at elicitation sites.  相似文献   

5.
6.
Involvement of dectin-2 in ultraviolet radiation-induced tolerance   总被引:5,自引:0,他引:5  
Hapten sensitization through UV-exposed skin induces hapten-specific tolerance which can be adoptively transferred by injecting T cells into naive recipients. The exact phenotype of the regulatory T cells responsible for inhibiting the immune response and their mode of action remain largely unclear. Dectin-2 is a C-type lectin receptor expressed on APCs. It was postulated that dectin-2 interacts with its putative ligands on T cells and that the interaction may deliver costimulatory signals in naive T cells. Using a soluble fusion protein of dectin-2 (sDec2) which should inhibit this interaction, we studied the effect on contact hypersensitivity (CHS) and its modulation by UV radiation. Injection of sDec2 affected neither the induction nor the elicitation phase of CHS. In contrast, UV-induced inhibition of the CHS induction was prevented upon injection of sDec2. In addition, hapten-specific tolerance did not develop. Even more importantly, injection of sDec2 into tolerized mice rendered the recipients susceptible to the specific hapten, indicating that sDec2 can break established tolerance. FACS analysis of spleen and lymph node cells revealed a significantly increased portion of sDec2-binding T cells in UV-tolerized mice. Furthermore, transfer of UV-mediated suppression was lost upon depletion of the sDec2-positive T cells. Taken together, these data indicate that dectin-2 and its yet unidentified ligand may play a crucial role in the mediation of UV-induced immunosuppression. Moreover, sDec2-reactive T cells appear to represent the regulatory T cells responsible for mediating UV-induced tolerance.  相似文献   

7.
IL-10 controls ultraviolet-induced carcinogenesis in mice   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
UV radiation-induced immunosuppression contributes significantly to the development of UV-induced skin cancer by inhibiting protective immune responses. IL-10 has been shown to be a key mediator of UV-induced immunosuppression. To investigate the role of IL-10 during photocarcinogenesis, groups of IL-10(+/+), IL-10(+/-), and IL-10(-/-) mice were chronically irradiated with UV. IL-10(+/+) and IL-10(+/-) mice developed skin cancer to similar extents, whereas IL-10(-/-) mice were protected against the induction of skin malignancies by UV. Because UV is able to induce regulatory T cells, which play a role in the suppression of protective immunity, UV-induced regulatory T cell function was analyzed. Splenic regulatory T cells from UV-irradiated IL-10(-/-) mice were unable to confer immunosuppression upon transfer into naive recipients. UV-induced CD4+CD25+ T cells from IL-10(-/-) mice showed impaired suppressor function when cocultured with conventional CD4+CD25- T cells. CD4+CD25- T cells from IL-10(-/-) mice produced increased amounts of IFN-gamma and enhanced numbers of CD4+TIM-3+ T cells were detectable within UV-induced tumors in IL-10(-/-) mice, suggesting strong Th1-driven immunity. Mice treated with CD8+ T cells from UV-irradiated IL-10(-/-) mice rejected a UV tumor challenge significantly faster, and augmented numbers of granzyme A+ cells were detected within injected UV tumors in IL-10(-/-) animals, suggesting marked antitumoral CTL responses. Together, these findings indicate that IL-10 is critically involved in antitumoral immunity during photocarcinogenesis. Moreover, these results point out the crucial role of Th1 responses and UV-induced regulatory T cell function in the protection against UV-induced tumor development.  相似文献   

8.
UV-induced DNA damage has been recognized as the major molecular trigger for photoimmunosuppression. IL-12 prevents UV-induced immunosuppression via its recently discovered capacity to reduce DNA damage presumably via induction of DNA repair. Because IL-18 shares some biological activities with IL-12 we studied the effect of IL-18 on UV-induced DNA damage and immunosuppression. IL-18 reduced UV-induced apoptosis of keratinocytes and supported long-term cell survival on UV exposure. Injection of IL-18 into mice that were exposed to UV radiation significantly lowered the number of apoptotic keratinocytes. Accordingly, radiation immunohistochemistry revealed reduced amounts of DNA damage in epidermal cells upon injection of IL-18. These effects were not observed in DNA repair-deficient (XpaKO) mice, indicating that IL-18 like IL-12 reduces DNA damage via DNA repair. UV-mediated suppression of the induction of contact hypersensitivity, which is known to be primarily triggered by DNA damage, was prevented upon injection of IL-18 before UV exposure in wild-type but not in XpaKO mice. In contrast to IL-12, IL-18 was not able either in wild-type or in XpaKO mice to break UV-induced immunotolerance that is mediated via regulatory T cells rather than in a DNA damage-dependent fashion. This result indicates that IL-12 is still unique in its capacity to restore immune responses because of its effect on regulatory T cells. Together, these data identify IL-18 as a further cytokine that exhibits the capacity to affect DNA repair. Though being primarily a proinflammatory cytokine through this capacity, IL-18 can also foster an immune response that is suppressed by UV radiation.  相似文献   

9.
Ultraviolet (UV) radiation present in sunlight plays a critical role in the initiation and promotion of nonmelanoma skin carcinogenesis and immune suppression. The immune suppressive effects of UV have been identified as a risk factor for skin cancer induction. For these reasons, scientists have focused on elucidating the mechanisms of UV-induced immune suppression to better understand the pathogenesis of skin cancer induction. A hallmark of UV-induced immune suppression is the generation of antigen-specific suppressor T cells. These suppressor cells have been shown to suppress antitumor immunity as well as other cell-mediated responses such as delayed-type hypersensitivity (DTH) reactions. Due to the excessive cost and time involved in traditional UV carcinogenic experiments, scientists have opted to use UV-induced suppression of DTH reactions as a surrogate model. DTH has been, and continues to be, a widely used assay system to measure in vivo immune function. Although somewhat unsophisticated by today's standards, this assay has great advantages because it presents a fast, inexpensive, and reliable model system to help dissect the mechanisms involved in UV-induced immune suppression. Furthermore, the murine model of DTH enables scientists to perform additional procedures, such as adoptive transfer studies with suppressor T cells, which are currently unavailable with human subjects.  相似文献   

10.
Immunosuppression by UV light contributes significantly to the induction of skin cancer by suppressing the cell-mediated immune responses which control the development of carcinogenesis. The B7/CD28-CTLA-4 signaling pathway provides costimulatory signals essential for Ag-specific T cell activation. To investigate the role of this pathway in photocarcinogenesis, we utilized transgenic (Tg) mice which constitutively express CTLA-4Ig, a high-affinity CD28/CTLA-4 antagonist that binds to both B7-1 and B7-2. The transgene is driven by a skin-specific promoter yielding high levels of CTLA-4Ig in the skin and serum. Chronic UV exposure of CTLA-4Ig Tg mice resulted in significantly reduced numbers of skin tumors, when compared to control mice. In addition, Tg mice were resistant to UV-induced suppression of delayed-type hypersensitivity responses to alloantigens. Most importantly, upon stimulation with mitogens and alloantigens, T cells isolated from CTLA-4Ig Tg mice produced significantly less IL-4 but more IFN-gamma compared to control T cells, suggesting an impaired Th2 response and a relative increase of Th1-type immunity. Together, these data show that overall B7 engagement directs immune responses toward the Th2 pathway. Moreover, they point out the crucial role of Th1 immune reactions in the protection against photocarcinogenesis.  相似文献   

11.
UV exposure suppresses the immune response to a variety of microbial, fungal, and viral Ags. In addition, UV radiation is a complete carcinogen and the immune suppression induced by UV radiation is a major risk factor for skin cancer induction. In this study, we examined the mechanisms underlying the induction of immune suppression and tolerance induction by UV radiation. Transferring lymph nodes cells from UV-irradiated, FITC-sensitized mice into normal recipients transferred immune tolerance. Contrary to expectations, the cell responsible was an FITC(+), IL-10-secreting, CD19(+), B220(+) B cell. Because the lipid mediator of inflammation, platelet-activating factor (PAF) is released by UV-irradiated keratinocytes and is essential for the induction of immune suppression, we determined its role in tolerance induction. When UV-irradiated mice were injected with PCA 4248, a selective PAF receptor (PAFR) antagonist, transfer of tolerance was suppressed. However, immune suppression was not transferred when FITC(+) cells from the draining lymph nodes of UV-irradiated, PAFR-deficient donor mice were injected into the recipients. Because PCA 4248 also blocks serotonin receptor binding, we measured the effect that blocking both serotonin and PAFR binding has on the transfer of immune suppression. Only when both PAF and serotonin binding were blocked could we inhibit tolerance induction. These data identify a novel function for PAF and serotonin in modulating immune function, the activation of immunoregulatory B cells.  相似文献   

12.
Hapten sensitization through UV-exposed skin induces hapten-specific tolerance that can be adoptively transferred by injecting T lymphocytes into naive recipients. The exact phenotype of T cells responsible for inhibiting the immune response and their mode of action remain unclear. Evidence exists that CTLA-4 negatively regulates T cell activation. We addressed whether CTLA-4 is involved in the transfer of UV-induced tolerance. Injection of lymph node cells from mice that were sensitized with dinitrofluorobenzene (DNFB) through UV-irradiated skin inhibited induction of contact hypersensitivity against DNFB in the recipient animals. When CTLA-4+ cells were depleted, transfer of suppression was lost. Likewise, significantly fewer lymphocytes enriched for CTLA-4+ cells were necessary to transfer suppression than unfractionated cells. Expression of CTLA-4 appears to be functionally relevant, since in vivo injection of a blocking anti-CTLA-4 Ab was able to break UV-induced tolerance and inhibited transfer of suppression. Upon stimulation with dendritic cells in the presence of the water-soluble DNFB analogue, DNBS, CTLA-4+ T cells from DNFB-tolerized mice secreted high levels of IL-10, TGF-beta, and IFN-gamma; low levels of IL-2; and no IL-4, resembling the cytokine pattern of T regulatory 1 cells. Ab blocking of CTLA-4 resulted in inhibition of IL-10 release. Accordingly, transfer of tolerance was not observed when recipients were treated with an anti-IL-10 Ab. Hence we propose that T cells, possibly of the T regulatory 1 type, transfer UV-mediated suppression through the release of IL-10. Activation of CTLA-4 appears to be important in this process.  相似文献   

13.
House dust mite (HDM), the most common allergen, activate both the IgE-associated and innate immune responses. To clarify the process of sensitization, we investigated the role of the CCL21, CCL19, and CCR7 axis in a mouse model of HDM-induced allergic asthma. HDM inhalation without systemic immunization resulted in a HDM-specific IgE response. CCR7-knockout (CCR7KO) mice exhibited greater airway inflammation and IgE responses compared to wild-type mice. We examined FoxP3 expression in these mice to clarify the contribution of regulatory cells to the responses. FoxP3 expression was higher in the lungs but not in the lymph nodes of CCR7KO mice compared to wild-type mice. In CCR7KO mice, FoxP3-positive cells were found in lung, but we observed higher release of IL-13, IL-5, TGF-β, IL-17, and HMGB1 in bronchoalveolar lavage fluid. We demonstrate here that immuno-regulation through CCR7 expression in T cells plays a role in HDM-specific sensitization in the airway.  相似文献   

14.
UV-induced immune suppression is a risk factor for sunlight-induced skin cancer. Exposure to UV radiation has been shown to suppress the rejection of highly antigenic UV-induced skin cancers, suppresses delayed and contact hypersensitivity, and depress the ability of dendritic cells to present Ag to T cells. One consequence of UV exposure is altered activation of T cell subsets. APCs from UV-irradiated mice fail to present Ag to Th1 T cells; however, Ag presentation to Th2 T cells is normal. While this has been known for some time, the mechanism behind the preferential suppression of Th1 cell activation has yet to be explained. We tested the hypothesis that this selective impairment of APC function results from altered cytokine production. We found that dendritic cells/macrophages (DC/Mphi) from UV-irradiated mice failed to secrete biologically active IL-12 following in vitro stimulation with LPS. Instead, DC/Mphi isolated from the lymphoid organs of UV-irradiated mice secreted IL-12p40 homodimer, a natural antagonist of biologically active IL-12. Furthermore, when culture supernatants from UV-derived DC/Mphi were added to IL-12-activated T cells, IFN-gamma secretion was totally suppressed, indicating that the IL-12p40 homodimer found in the supernatant fluid was biologically active. We suggest that by suppressing DC/Mphi IL-12p70 secretion while promoting IL-12p40 homodimer secretion, UV exposure preferentially suppress the activation of Th1 cells, thereby suppressing Th-1 cell-driven inflammatory immune reactions.  相似文献   

15.
Immunocellular migrations out of and into the skin and modulations of functional cell surface molecules on antigen-presenting cells (APCs), as well as their immunoregulatory cytokine production, are important factors involved in the mechanism of UV-induced immunosuppression and tolerance. Of particular interest here are the effects of low-dose UVB exposures that can suppress the ability of a contact sensitizer to induce contact hypersensitivity (CHS) through the site (local immunosuppression) without inducing suppression of CHS induced through skin distant to the UV exposure. Such UV-irradiated skin has many changes with respect to composition of immunocompetent cells and cytokine production. After UV exposure, Langerhans cells/dendritic cells migrate from the skin to draining lymph nodes (DLNs) as they do from contact sensitizer-applied normal skin. On the other hand, UV causes monocytic/macrophagic cells to infiltrate into the dermis and then into the epidermis; these can also be shown to be induced by contact sesitizers to migrate to DLNs. Alterations in cell surface and immunoregulatory cytokine phenotypes of the cutaneous APCs in both the skin and DLNs are critical for CHS suppression and tolerance induction. Here we describe the phenotypic changes of immunocompetent cells in UV-irradiated skin in regard to CHS suppression and tolerance and methodologies to approach this area.  相似文献   

16.
UV radiation of the skin impairs immune responses to haptens and to tumor Ags. Transcutaneous immunization (TCI) is an effective method of inducing immune responses to protein and peptide Ag. We explore the effect of UV irradiation on TCI. The generation of Ag-specific CTL to OVA protein, but not class I MHC-restricted OVA peptide, is inhibited by TCI through UV-irradiated skin. Consequently, the induction of protein contact hypersensitivity and in vivo Ag-specific CTL activity following OVA protein immunization is prevented. Application of haptens to UV-exposed skin induces hapten-specific tolerance. We demonstrate that application of protein or class II MHC-restricted OVA peptide to UV-irradiated skin induces transferable Ag-specific tolerance. This tolerance is mediated by CD4(+)CD25(+) T regulatory (T(reg)) cells. These Ag-specific T(reg) cells inhibit the priming of CTL following protein immunization in the presence of CpG adjuvant. IL-10 deficiency is known to prevent hapten-specific tolerance induction. In this study, we demonstrate, using IL-10-deficient mice and adoptive T cell transfer, that IL-10 is required for the direct inhibition of CTL priming following immunization through UV-irradiated skin. However, IL-10 is not required for the induction of T(reg) cells through UV-irradiated skin as IL-10-deficient T(reg) cells are able to mediate tolerance. Rather, host-derived IL-10 is required for the function of UV-generated T(reg) cells. These experiments indicate that protein and peptide TCI through UV-irradiated skin may be used to induce robust Ag-specific tolerance to neo-Ags and that UV-induced T(reg) cells mediate their effects in part through the modulation of IL-10.  相似文献   

17.
Although previous studies have shown that altered B7 costimulation plays a critical role in UV irradiation-induced regulation of immunity, the individual roles of the B7 receptors (CD28 and CTLA-4) or the B7 family members (CD80 and CD86) have not been explored. Thus, we investigated CTLA-4 signaling during photocarcinogenesis of chronically UV-B-exposed mice using an antagonistic anti-CTLA-4 Ab. Anti-CTLA-4-treated mice developed significantly fewer UV-induced tumors. Moreover, anti-CTLA-4 treatment induced long-lasting protective immunity because progressively growing UV tumors inoculated into anti-CTLA-4- and UV-treated mice that had not developed tumors were rejected. Next, we used mice deficient for CD80, CD86, or both in photocarcinogenesis studies to assess the relative contributions of these CTLA-4 ligands. Double-deficient mice showed significantly reduced UV-induced skin tumor development, whereas CD86(-/-) mice produced skin cancer earlier compared with CD80(-/-) and control mice. The growth of UV-induced tumors appears to be controlled by UV-induced suppressor T cells, because CD80(-/-)/CD86(-/-) mice had strongly reduced numbers of UV-induced CD4(+)CD25(+) suppressor T cells. In vitro, CTLA-4 blockade inhibited the suppressor activity of UV-induced CD4(+)CD25(+) T cells, suggesting that reduced photocarcinogenesis might be due to decreased numbers or function of suppressor T cells. Together, these data indicate that blocking CD80/86-CTLA-4 signaling induced immune protection against the development of UV-induced skin tumors. Furthermore, CD86-mediated costimulation appears to play a more critical role in the protection against photocarcinogenesis than CD80.  相似文献   

18.
UV-damaged DNA-binding protein (UV-DDB) is essential for global genome nucleotide excision repair of UV-induced cyclobutane pyrimidine dimers (CPD) and accelerates repair of 6-4 photoproducts (6-4PP). The high UV-induced skin cancer susceptibility of mice compared to man has been attributed to low expression of the UV-DDB subunit DDB2 in mouse skin cells. However, DDB2 knockout mice exhibit enhanced UVB skin carcinogenesis indicating that DDB2 protects mice against UV-induced skin cancer. To resolve these apparent contradictory findings, we systematically investigated the NER capacity of mouse fibroblasts and keratinocytes. Compared to fibroblasts, keratinocytes exhibited an increased level of UV-DDB activity, contained significantly higher levels of other NER proteins (i.e. XPC and XPB) and displayed efficient repair of CPD. At low UVB dosages, the difference in skin cancer susceptibility between DDB2 KO and wild type mice was even much more pronounced than previously reported with high dose UVB exposures. Hence, our observations show that mouse keratinocytes express sufficient levels of UV-DDB for efficient repair of photolesions and efficient protection against UV-induced skin cancer at physiological relevant UV exposure.  相似文献   

19.
Cyclobutane pyrimidine dimers (CPDs) and 6-4 photoproducts (6-4PPs) comprise major UV-induced photolesions. If left unrepaired, these lesions can induce mutations and skin cancer, which is facilitated by UV-induced immunosuppression. Yet the contribution of lesion and cell type specificity to the harmful biological effects of UV exposure remains currently unclear. Using a series of photolyase-transgenic mice to ubiquitously remove either CPDs or 6-4PPs from all cells in the mouse skin or selectively from basal keratinocytes, we show that the majority of UV-induced acute effects to require the presence of CPDs in basal keratinocytes in the mouse skin. At the fundamental level of gene expression, CPDs induce the expression of genes associated with repair and recombinational processing of DNA damage, as well as apoptosis and a response to stress. At the organismal level, photolyase-mediated removal of CPDs, but not 6-4PPs, from the genome of only basal keratinocytes substantially diminishes the incidence of skin tumors; however, it does not affect the UVB-mediated immunosuppression. Taken together, these findings reveal a differential role of basal keratinocytes in these processes, providing novel insights into the skin's acute and chronic responses to UV in a lesion- and cell-type-specific manner.  相似文献   

20.
Epidemiological and experimental evidences have established solar ultraviolet (UV) radiation as the leading cause of skin cancers. Specifically, the frequency of non-melanoma skin cancer, one of the malignancies with the most rapidly increasing incidence, is directly related to the total exposure to solar UV light. As part of a general effort to elucidate the components of cellular signal transduction pathways, the mechanisms of cellular responses to UV radiation have received considerable attention over the last few years. These efforts were driven mainly by the conviction that understanding how normal cells respond to extracellular stimuli such as exposure to UV radiation will undoubtedly help in deciphering what goes wrong in a variety of clinical disorders including skin cancers and will assist in the development of novel therapeutic strategies. Studies over the last decade have established that UV radiation induces a bewildering array of signal transduction pathways, some of which could lead to apoptotic cell death. UV-induced cell death by apoptosis is considered to be a natural protective mechanism that removes damaged keratinocytes and circumvents the risk of malignant transformation. In this review, we summarize some of the most important findings regarding the response and role of mitogen-activated protein kinases in UVA and UVB radiation-induced signaling to apoptosis in keratinocytes. We will also briefly discuss what is known about the role of the BCL-2 family of proteins, the emerging role of lysosomal proteases and other important cytosolic signaling proteins in UV-induced apoptosis.  相似文献   

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