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CRH functions as a growth factor/cytokine in the skin

✍ Scribed by A. Slominski; B. Zbytek; A. Pisarchik; R.M. Slominski; M.A. Zmijewski; J. Wortsman


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2005
Tongue
English
Weight
314 KB
Volume
206
Category
Article
ISSN
0021-9541

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✦ Synopsis


Abstract

We tested the effect of CRH and related peptides in a large panel of human skin cells for growth factor/cytokine activities. In skin cells CRH action is mediated by CRH‐R1, a subject to posttranslational modification with expression of alternatively spliced isoforms. Activation of CRH‐R1 induced generation of both cAMP and IP3 in the majority of epidermal and dermal cells (except for normal keratinocytes and one melanoma line), indicating cell type‐dependent coupling to signal transduction pathways. Phenotypic effects on cell proliferation were however dependent on both cell type and nutrition conditions. Specifically, CRH stimulated dermal fibroblasts proliferation, by increasing transition from G~1~/0 to the S phase, while in keratinocytes CRH inhibited cell proliferation. In normal and immortalized melanocytes CRH effect showed dichotomy and thus, it inhibited melanocyte proliferation in serum‐containing medium CRH through G~2~ arrest, while serum free media led instead to CRH enhanced DNA synthesis (through increased transition from G~1~/G~0~ to S phase and decreased subG~1~ signal, indicating DNA degradation). CRH also induced inhibition of early and late apoptosis in the same cells, demonstrated by analysis with the annexin V stains. Thus, CRH acts on epidermal melanocytes as a survival factor under the stress of starvation (anti‐apoptotic) as well as inhibitor of growth factors induced cell proliferation. In conclusion, CRH and related peptides can couple CRH‐R1 to any of diverse signal transduction pathways; they also regulate cell viability and proliferation in cell type and growth condition‐dependent manners. J.Cell.Physiol. © 2005 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.


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