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MicroRNA-203
helps build skin’s protective barrier
Monday, March 3, 2008
Showing
skin. In the outer layer of the skin, microRNA-203 helps
build a tough protective barrier by repressing the activity
of a molecule called p63 (red). When microRNA-203 can’t
stem p63’s activity, cells proliferate (bottom) –
findings that may reveal new insights about cancer.
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Credit:
Rockefeller
University
Every minute, 30,000 of our
outermost skin cells die so that we can live. When they do, new
cells migrate from the inner layer of the skin to the surface of
it, where they form a tough protective barrier. In a series of
elegant experiments in mice, researchers at Rockefeller
University have now discovered a tiny RNA molecule that helps
create this barrier. The results not only yield new insight into
how skin first evolved, but also suggest how healthy cells can
turn cancerous.
Hundreds of these tiny RNA molecules,
called microRNAs, are expressed in skin, “But there was
something curious about one in particular, microRNA-203,”
says Rui Yi, a postdoc who works with Elaine Fuchs, head of the
Laboratory of Mammalian Cell Biology and Development. “As
an embryo develops, the expression of microRNA-203 jumps very
quickly over just two days. From being barely detectable at day
13, this microRNA becomes the most abundant expressed in skin,”
says Yi, whose work will be published online in Nature
March 2. MicroRNAs, which were discovered in mammals in 2001,
regulate genes outside of the cell’s nucleus.
Yi and
Fuchs, who is also a Howard Hughes Medical Institute investigator
and Rebecca C. Lancefield Professor at Rockefeller, found that
during the 13th day of development, mouse skin is primarily
composed of undifferentiated stem cells. Two days later, these
stem cells exit the inner layer of the skin and begin to
differentiate into cells that form the outermost, protective
layer. MicroRNA-203’s expression skyrockets precisely
during this period, suggesting that it plays some key role in the
barrier’s development.
In order to figure out its
role, Yi and Fuchs needed to pinpoint exactly where microRNA-203
is expressed. Other microRNAs have been found to be specific to
heart and muscle tissues; some exist almost exclusively in the
brain. However, this microRNA was found only in very specific
types of skin — stratified epithelial tissues, to be exact
— and only in this skin type’s outer layers. What’s
more, this expression pattern is identical to that found in
humans, zebrafish, chickens and the like — in other words,
vertebrates that evolved more than 400 million years apart.
“If
it has been expressed in this very specific tissue for a long
time and across several species, it means that it probably plays
an important role there,” says Yi. To find out its
function, Yi, in one set of experiments, used a genetic technique
to precociously express microRNA in the inner layer of the skin,
where stem cells proliferate at a fast clip. In a second set of
experiments, he blocked microRNA-203 from functioning in the
outer layer using an antagomir, a molecule that binds directly to
microRNA-203 and shuts down its ability to carry out its
function.
In the first set, he found that the stem cells
proliferated significantly less than they did when microRNA-203
wasn’t expressed, and, as a result, the mice formed very
thin skin — hardly a protective layer at all. The stem
cells, the researchers saw, lost their ability to proliferate not
because microRNA-203 killed them off but because it suppressed
the activity of a molecule called p63, whose job is to keep
cells, primarily stem cells, proliferating. In the second set of
experiments, Yi found that the cells in the outer layer
proliferated significantly more than they did when microRNA-203
was expressed. The reason: because microRNA-203 wasn’t
available to shut down p63’s busy work.
“We
found that microRNA-203 acts to stop the translation of the p63
protein,” says Fuchs. “The result is a swift
transition from proliferating stem cells within the innermost
layer of the epidermis and terminally differentiating cells as
they exit this layer and move outward to the skin surface.”
The
findings have intriguing implications for cancer, since p63 is
found in excess in cancer cells. “As a next step, we are
going to examine whether low expression of microRNA-203 is
associated with squamous cell carcinomas,” says Fuchs, “and
whether by putting back microRNA-203 we can inhibit the growth of
these cancer cells.”
Source:
Rockefeller University

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