4.6 Article

Transgenic expression of human amphiregulin in mouse skin: inflammatory epidermal hyperplasia and enlarged sebaceous glands

Journal

EXPERIMENTAL DERMATOLOGY
Volume 25, Issue 3, Pages 187-193

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/exd.12886

Keywords

amphiregulin; EGF receptor; psoriasis; sebaceous glands; skin inflammation

Categories

Funding

  1. NIAMS NIH HHS [K01 AR059678, R01 AR063437, K01 AR050462, P30 AR39750, R01 AR062546, R21 AR063852, R03 AR049420, R01 AR052889, P30 AR039750] Funding Source: Medline

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To explore the role of amphiregulin in inflammatory epidermal hyperplasia, we overexpressed human AREG (hAREG) in FVB/ N mice using a bovine K5 promoter. A construct containing AREG coding sequences flanked by 50 and 30 untranslated region sequences (AREG-UTR) led to a > 10-fold increase in hAREG expression compared to an otherwiseidentical construct containing only the coding region (AREGCDR). AREG-UTR mice developed tousled, greasy fur as well as elongated nails and thickened, erythematous tail skin. No such phenotype was evident in AREG-CDR mice. Histologically, AREG-UTR mice presented with marked epidermal hyperplasia of tail skin (2.1-fold increase in epidermal thickness with a 9.5fold increase in Ki-67 + cells) accompanied by significantly increased CD4+ T-cell infiltration. Dorsal skin of AREG-UTR mice manifested lesser but still significant increases in epidermal thickness and keratinocyte hyperplasia. AREG-UTR mice also developed marked and significant sebaceous gland enlargement, with corresponding increases in Ki-67 + cells. To determine the response of AREG-UTR animals to a pro-inflammatory skin challenge, topical imiquimod (IMQ) or vehicle cream was applied to dorsal and tail skin. IMQ increased dorsal skin thickness similarly in both AREG-UTR and wild type mice (1.7-and 2.2-fold vs vehicle, P < 0.001 each), but had no such effect on tail skin. These results confirm that keratinocyte expression of hAREG elicits inflammatory epidermal hyperplasia, and are consistent with prior reports of tail epidermal hyperplasia and increased sebaceous gland size in mice expressing human epigen.

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