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Scavenger receptor class B type I is expressed in cultured keratinocytes and epidermis. Regulation in response to changes in cholesterol homeostasis and barrier requirements.
Authors:Hiroki Tsuruoka  Weerapan Khovidhunkit  Barbara E Brown  Joachim W Fluhr  Peter M Elias  Kenneth R Feingold
Institution:Dermatology and Medical (Metabolism) Services, Department of Veterans Affairs Medical Center, San Francisco, California 94121, USA.
Abstract:Cholesterol is a key lipid in the stratum corneum, where it is critical for permeability barrier homeostasis. The epidermis is an active site of cholesterol synthesis, but inhibition of epidermal cholesterol synthesis with topically applied statins only modestly affects epidermal permeability barrier function, suggesting a possible compensatory role for extraepidermal cholesterol. Scavenger receptor class B type I (SR-BI) is a recently described cell surface receptor for high density lipoproteins (HDL) that mediates the selective uptake of cholesterol esters from circulating HDL. In the present study, we demonstrate that SR-BI is present in cultured human keratinocytes and that calcium-induced differentiation markedly decreases SR-BI levels. Additionally, the cell association of (3)H]cholesterol-labeled HDL decreased in differentiated versus undifferentiated keratinocytes. Furthermore, the inhibition of cholesterol synthesis with simvastatin resulted in a 3-4-fold increase in both SR-BI mRNA and protein levels, whereas conversely, addition of 25-hydroxycholesterol suppressed SR-BI levels by approximately 50%. SR-BI mRNA is also expressed in murine epidermis, increasing by 50% in parallel with cholesterol requirements following acute barrier disruption. Because the increase is completely blocked by occlusion with a vapor-impermeable membrane, changes in epidermal SR-BI expression are regulated specifically by barrier requirements. Lastly, using immunofluorescence we demonstrated that SR-BI is present in human epidermis predominantly in the basal layer and increases following barrier disruption. In summary, the present study demonstrates first that SR-BI is expressed in keratinocytes and regulated by cellular cholesterol requirements, suggesting that it plays a role in keratinocyte cholesterol homeostasis. Second, the increase in SR-BI following barrier disruption suggests that SR-BI expression increases to facilitate cholesterol uptake leading to barrier restoration.
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