PROLIFERATIVE RESPONSES OF THE SKIN TO EXTERNAL STIMULI

被引:36
|
作者
MARKS, F
FURSTENBERGER, G
机构
关键词
D O I
10.2307/3431849
中图分类号
X [环境科学、安全科学];
学科分类号
08 ; 0830 ;
摘要
The skin, in particular the epidermis, offers unique opportunities to investigate the induction and control of cellular proliferation and tissue homeostasis both under in vivo and in vitro conditions. Moreover, it represents one of the most feasible model systems for experimental cancer research. As the primary border of the body, the skin has important protective and defensive functions. A general response to external injury consists of a thickening of the epithelial layer (epidermal hyperplasia) combined with an inflammatory reaction. This hyperplastic transformation of the skin is a critical condition of skin tumor development (i.e., conversion and promotion) and of the wound response. It is believed to be due to a transformation of keratinocytes into an activated state characterized by an increased rate of proliferation and the ability to release a series of growth factors and other cytokines that coordinate the defense reaction (e.g., hyperproliferation, recruitment of leukocytes, activation of the immune system) along auto- and paracrine feedback loops. The initial and probably later phases of this response depend critically on a local release of eicosanoids such as prostaglandins and lipoxygenase-generated factors. A unique reaction seen upon phorbol ester treatment of mouse skin is a strong induction of the enzyme 8-lipoxygenase, which might be involved in skin tumor development by catalyzing the generation of clastogenic metabolites thought to play a role in the conversion stage. Hyperplasia may be considered to be the result of an imbalance between the rates of cell gain and cell loss. Therefore, hyperplastic transformation has to be distinguished from another response of skin to external stimuli where the homeostatic equilibrium is maintained (i.e., no hyperplasia develops in spite of strong hyperproliferation). This balanced hyperproliferation as induced by mild stimuli (pressure, phorbol ester 4-O-methyl-TPA) is neither accompanied by inflammatory reactions nor by the symptoms of keratinocyte activation. It may simply be due to an increased rate of cell-cycle traverse in the proliferative tissue compartment. In contrast, the prostaglandin-dependent activation of keratinocytes leading to hyperplastic transformation resembles in many aspects (such as, for instance, the activation of cell -cycle-related genes) the G(o)-S transition of cells in vitro. The control of proliferative homeostasis in normal epidermis is an unresolved problem. It is not known whether the rate of cell proliferation adapts automatically to the rate of terminal differentiation or whether this adaption is regulated by local factors such as the elusive chalones or other inhibitory signals like transforming growth factor beta. The same is true for stimulatory growth factors such as epidermal growth factor and transform ing growth factor-alpha whose function may be that of wound hormones rather than of homeostatic regulators of normal tissue regeneration.
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页码:95 / 101
页数:7
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