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Low doses of ultraviolet A radiation stimulate adhesion of human dermal fibroblasts by integrins in a protein kinase C-dependent pathway

✍ Scribed by Armelle Tupet; Corinne Lebreton-De Coster; Louis Dubertret; Bernard Coulomb


Publisher
Elsevier Science
Year
1999
Tongue
English
Weight
647 KB
Volume
49
Category
Article
ISSN
1011-1344

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✦ Synopsis


In this work, we have studied the modulation of fibroblast-extracellular matrix interactions by physiological doses of ultraviolet A (UV-A) radiation using an adhesion assay on collagen. We have shown that low doses of UV-A (20 kJ/m2) stimulate fibroblast adhesion while higher doses (100 and 200 kJ/m2) inhibit it. By measurement of the thiobarbituric acid reactive substances (TBARS) and use of the chain-breaking antioxidant vitamin E, no role of lipid peroxidation can be detected in these effects. By incubating fibroblasts with a specific protein kinase C (PKC) inhibitor, GF109203X, we have demonstrated that the stimulation of the adhesion by low doses of UV-A involves, at least in part, a PKC-dependent mechanism. In addition, using function-blocking antibodies of alpha 1, alpha 2 or alpha 5 integrin chains involved in extracellular matrix anchorage, we have shown that they decrease the stimulation of adhesion following low doses of UV-A radiation, demonstrating the involvement of these three integrin chains in this UV-A effect. In parallel, 20 kJ/M2 of UV-A are found to rapidly stimulate membrane expression of alpha 1, alpha 2 and alpha 5 integrin chains. This work, which underlines the involvement of integrins in UV-A effects, contributes to the evaluation of the mechanisms by which cell-matrix interactions modulate cell behaviour.


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