4.7 Article

The Desmosomal Protein Desmoglein 1 Aids Recovery of Epidermal Differentiation after Acute UV Light Exposure

Journal

JOURNAL OF INVESTIGATIVE DERMATOLOGY
Volume 134, Issue 8, Pages 2154-2162

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/jid.2014.124

Keywords

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Categories

Funding

  1. NIH [R01 AR041836, CA122151]
  2. JL Mayberry endowment
  3. Telethon, Italy [GGP09230]
  4. European ERA-Net Research Program on Rare Diseases (E-Rare-2)
  5. Italian Association for Cancer Research (AIRC) [IG5348]
  6. Dermatology Foundation
  7. NIH/NCI Ruth L Kirschstein Training Grant through Northwestern University's Robert H Lurie Comprehensive Cancer Center [T32 CA070085-14]
  8. Northwestern University Lurie Comprehensive Cancer Center's Continuing Umbrella of Research Experience (CURE) Summer Program for Underserved Students [P30 CA060553]
  9. Northwestern University Skin Disease Research Center (NIH/NIAMS) [5P30AR057216-02]
  10. [AR43380]

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Epidermal structure is damaged by exposure to UV light, but the molecular mechanisms governing structural repair are largely unknown. UVB (290-320 nm wavelengths) exposure before induction of differentiation reduced expression of differentiation-associated proteins, including desmoglein 1 (Dsg1), desmocollin 1 (Dsc1), and keratins 1 and 10 (K1/K10), in a dose-dependent manner in normal human epidermal keratinocytes (NHEKs). The UVB induced reduction in both Dsg1 transcript and protein was associated with reduced binding of the p63 transcription factor to previously unreported enhancer regulatory regions of the Dsg1 gene. As Dsg1 promotes epidermal differentiation in addition to participating in cell cell adhesion, the role of Dsg1 in aiding differentiation after UVB damage was tested. Compared with controls, depleting Dsg1 via short hairpin RNA resulted in further reduction of Dsc1 and K1/K10 expression in monolayer NHEK cultures and in abnormal epidermal architecture in organotypic skin models recovering from UVB exposure. Ectopic expression of Dsg1 in keratinocyte monolayers rescued the UVB induced differentiation defect. Treatment of UVB exposed monolayer or organotypic cultures with trichostatin A, a histone deacetylase inhibitor, partially restored differentiation marker expression, suggesting a potential therapeutic strategy for reversing UV induced impairment of epidermal differentiation after acute sun exposure.

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