4.7 Article

Altered E-Cadherin Levels and Distribution in Melanocytes Precede Clinical Manifestations of Vitiligo

Journal

JOURNAL OF INVESTIGATIVE DERMATOLOGY
Volume 135, Issue 7, Pages 1810-1819

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1038/jid.2015.25

Keywords

-

Categories

Funding

  1. MENRT
  2. ARC
  3. Ligue contre le cancer (Oise)
  4. Societe Francaise de Dermatologie (SFD)
  5. Ligue Nationale Contre le Cancer (Equipe labellisee) [EL2012.LNCC/LL]
  6. INCa [2011-1-PL BIO-03-IC-1]
  7. Labex CelTisPhyBio [ANR-11-LBX-0038]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Vitiligo is the most common depigmenting disorder resulting from the loss of melanocytes from the basal epidermal layer. The pathogenesis of the disease is likely multifactorial and involves autoimmune causes, as well as oxidative and mechanical stress. It is important to identify early events in vitiligo to clarify pathogenesis, improve diagnosis, and inform therapy. Here, we show that E-cadherin (Ecad), which mediates the adhesion between melanocytes and keratinocytes in the epidermis, is absent from or discontinuously distributed across melanocyte membranes of vitiligo patients long before clinical lesions appear. This abnormality is associated with the detachment of the melanocytes from the basal to the suprabasal layers in the epidermis. Using human epidermal reconstructed skin and mouse models with normal or defective Ecad expression in melanocytes, we demonstrated that Ecad is required for melanocyte adhesiveness to the basal layer under oxidative and mechanical stress, establishing a link between silent/preclinical, cell-autonomous defects in vitiligo melanocytes and known environmental stressors accelerating disease expression. Our results implicate a primary predisposing skin defect affecting melanocyte adhesiveness that, under stress conditions, leads to disappearance of melanocytes and clinical vitiligo. Melanocyte adhesiveness is thus a potential target for therapy aiming at disease stabilization.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.7
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available