|  Help  |  About  |  Contact Us

Publication : Activating β-catenin signaling in CD133-positive dermal papilla cells increases hair inductivity.

First Author  Zhou L Year  2016
Journal  FEBS J Volume  283
Issue  15 Pages  2823-35
PubMed ID  27312243 Mgi Jnum  J:253501
Mgi Id  MGI:6092574 Doi  10.1111/febs.13784
Citation  Zhou L, et al. (2016) Activating beta-catenin signaling in CD133-positive dermal papilla cells increases hair inductivity. FEBS J 283(15):2823-35
abstractText  Bioengineering hair follicles using cells isolated from human tissue remains a difficult task. Dermal papilla (DP) cells are known to guide the growth and cycling activities of hair follicles by interacting with keratinocytes. However, DP cells quickly lose their inductivity during in vitro passaging. Rodent DP cell cultures need external addition of growth factors, including WNT and BMP molecules, to maintain the hair inductive property. CD133 is expressed by a subpopulation of DP cells that are capable of inducing hair follicle formation in vivo. We report here that expression of a stabilized form of beta-catenin promoted clonal growth of CD133-positive (CD133+) DP cells in in vitro three-dimensional hydrogel culture while maintaining expression of DP markers, including alkaline phosphatase (AP), CD133, and integrin alpha8. After a 2-week in vitro culture, cultured CD133+ DP cells with up-regulated beta-catenin activity led to an accelerated in vivo hair growth in reconstituted skin compared to control cells. Further analysis showed that matrix cell proliferation and differentiation were significantly promoted in hair follicles when beta-catenin signaling was up-regulated in CD133+ DP cells. Our data highlight an important role for beta-catenin signaling in promoting the inductive capability of CD133+ DP cells for in vitro expansion and in vivo hair follicle regeneration, which could potentially be applied to cultured human DP cells.
Quick Links:
 
Quick Links:
 

Expression

Publication --> Expression annotations

 

Other

6 Bio Entities

Trail: Publication

0 Expression