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Publication : Loss of hairless confers susceptibility to UVB-induced tumorigenesis via disruption of NF-kappaB signaling.

First Author  Kim H Year  2012
Journal  PLoS One Volume  7
Issue  6 Pages  e39691
PubMed ID  22761871 Mgi Jnum  J:187917
Mgi Id  MGI:5438735 Doi  10.1371/journal.pone.0039691
Citation  Kim H, et al. (2012) Loss of hairless confers susceptibility to UVB-induced tumorigenesis via disruption of NF-kappaB signaling. PLoS One 7(6):e39691
abstractText  In order to model squamous cell carcinoma development in vivo, researchers have long preferred hairless mouse models such as SKH-1 mice that have traditionally been classified as 'wild-type' mice irrespective of the genetic factors underlying their hairless phenotype. The work presented here shows that mutations in the Hairless (Hr) gene not only result in the hairless phenotype of the SKH-1 and Hr(-/-) mouse lines but also cause aberrant activation of NFkappaB and its downstream effectors. We show that in the epidermis, Hr is an early UVB response gene that regulates NFkappaB activation and thereby controls cellular responses to irradiation. Therefore, when Hr expression is decreased in Hr mutant animals there is a corresponding increase in NFkappaB activity that is augmented by UVB irradiation. This constitutive activation of NFkappaB in the Hr mutant epidermis leads to the stimulation a large variety of downstream effectors including the cell cycle regulators cyclin D1 and cyclin E, the anti-apoptosis protein Bcl-2, and the pro-inflammatory protein Cox-2. Therefore, Hr loss results in a state of uncontrolled epidermal proliferation that promotes tumor development, and Hr mutant mice should no longer be considered merely hairless 'wild-type' mice. Instead, Hr is a crucial UVB response gene and its loss creates a permissive environment that potentiates increased tumorigenesis.
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