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Fibroblasts Play a Regulatory Role in the Control of Pigmentation in Reconstructed Human Skin from Skin Types I and II

Authors :
Martin Heaton
David J. Gawkrodger
C Layton
S J Hedley
Sheila Mac Neil
R. A. Dawson
Kaushik H. Chakrabarty
Source :
Pigment Cell Research. 15:49-56
Publication Year :
2002
Publisher :
Wiley, 2002.

Abstract

Human melanocytes in monolayer culture are extremely dependent on a wide range of soluble signals for their proliferation and melanogenesis. The advent of three-dimensional models of reconstructed skin allows one to ask questions of how these cells are regulated within a setting which more closely approximates normal skin. The purpose of this study was to investigate to what extent melanocytes within a reconstructed skin model are sensitive to regulation by dermal fibroblasts, basement membrane (BM) proteins and the addition of alpha-melanocyte-stimulating hormone (alpha-MSH). Sterilized acellular de-epidermized dermis (prepared to retain BM proteins or deliberately denuded of BM by enzymatic treatment) from skin type I or II was reconstituted with fibroblasts, melanocytes and keratinocytes. In all but one case (9/10), cell donors were skin type I or II. The presence of BM antigens was found to be necessary for positional orientation of the melanocytes; in the absence of BM, melanocytes moved into the upper keratinocyte layer pigmenting spontaneously. Addition of fibroblasts suppressed the extent of spontaneous pigmentation of melanocytes within this model. Neither alpha-MSH nor cholera toxin induced pigmentation in this model despite the fact that melanocytes clearly had the ability to synthesize pigment.

Details

ISSN :
08935785
Volume :
15
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Pigment Cell Research
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....424dc702eb1c6fb3fba5a6fc9fa28fd8
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1034/j.1600-0749.2002.00067.x