4.7 Article

Skin Fragility and Impaired Desmosomal Adhesion in Mice Lacking All Keratins

Journal

JOURNAL OF INVESTIGATIVE DERMATOLOGY
Volume 134, Issue 4, Pages 1012-1022

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1038/jid.2013.416

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Funding

  1. DFG [MA1316-9/3, MA1316-15, MA1316-17, INST 268/230-1, LE566-18-1]
  2. Translational Center for Regenerative Medicine, TRM, Leipzig [0315883]
  3. START-Program of the Faculty of Medicine, RWTH Aachen

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Keratins perform major structural and regulatory functions in epithelia. Owing to redundancy, their respective contribution to epidermal integrity, adhesion, and cell junction formation has not been addressed in full. Unexpectedly, the constitutive deletion of type II keratins in mice was embryonic lethal similar to E9.5 without extensive tissue damage. This prompted us to analyze keratin functions in skin where keratins are best characterized. Here, we compare the mosaic and complete deletion of all type II keratins in mouse skin, with distinct consequences on epidermal integrity, adhesion, and organismal survival. Mosaic knockout (KO) mice survived similar to 12 days while global KO mice died perinatally because of extensive epidermal damage. Coinciding with absence of keratins, epidermal fragility, inflammation, increased epidermal thickness, and increased proliferation were noted in both strains of mice, accompanied by significantly smaller desmosomes. Decreased desmosome size was due to accumulation of desmosomal proteins in the cytoplasm, causing intercellular adhesion defects resulting in intercellular splits. Mixing different ratios of wild-type and KO keratinocytes revealed that similar to 60% of keratin-expressing cells were sufficient to maintain epithelial sheets under stress. Our data reveal a major contribution of keratins to the maintenance of desmosomal adhesion and epidermal integrity with relevance for the treatment of epidermolysis bullosa simplex and other keratinopathies.

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