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Publication : Mitochondrial respiratory uncoupling promotes keratinocyte differentiation and blocks skin carcinogenesis.

First Author  Lago CU Year  2012
Journal  Oncogene Volume  31
Issue  44 Pages  4725-31
PubMed ID  22266853 Mgi Jnum  J:191779
Mgi Id  MGI:5462535 Doi  10.1038/onc.2011.630
Citation  Lago CU, et al. (2012) Mitochondrial respiratory uncoupling promotes keratinocyte differentiation and blocks skin carcinogenesis. Oncogene 31(44):4725-31
abstractText  Decreased mitochondrial oxidative metabolism is a hallmark bioenergetic characteristic of malignancy that may have an adaptive role in carcinogenesis. By stimulating proton leak, mitochondrial uncoupling proteins (UCP1-3) increase mitochondrial respiration and may thereby oppose cancer development. To test this idea, we generated a mouse model that expresses an epidermal-targeted keratin-5-UCP3 (K5-UCP3) transgene and exhibits significantly increased cutaneous mitochondrial respiration compared with wild type (FVB/N). Remarkably, we observed that mitochondrial uncoupling drove keratinocyte/epidermal differentiation both in vitro and in vivo. This increase in epidermal differentiation corresponded to the loss of markers of the quiescent bulge stem cell population, and an increase in epidermal turnover measured using a bromodeoxyuridine (BrdU)-based transit assay. Interestingly, these changes in K5-UCP3 skin were associated with a nearly complete resistance to chemically-mediated multistage skin carcinogenesis. These data suggest that targeting mitochondrial respiration is a promising novel avenue for cancer prevention and treatment.
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