4.6 Article

Human epithelial stem cell survival within their niche requires tonic cannabinoid receptor 1-signalling-Lessons from the hair follicle

Journal

EXPERIMENTAL DERMATOLOGY
Volume 30, Issue 4, Pages 479-493

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/exd.14294

Keywords

cannabinoid receptor; epithelial stem cell; hair follicle; proliferation; survival

Categories

Funding

  1. NIHR Manchester Biomedical Research Centre, UK
  2. Osaka City University Graduate School of Medicine
  3. MEXT/JSPS KAKENHI [25461708]
  4. Inflammatory Hair Diseases Programme
  5. Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research [25461708] Funding Source: KAKEN

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Research has shown that selective activation of the cannabinoid receptor-1 pathway significantly increases the number and proliferation of human epithelial stem cells in scalp hair follicles, while also promoting apoptosis in their differentiated progeny. This highlights the crucial role of CB1 signaling in the survival of adult human scalp hair follicle stem cells within their niche.
The endocannabinoid system (ECS) regulates multiple aspects of human epithelial physiology, including inhibition/stimulation of keratinocyte proliferation/apoptosis, respectively. Yet, how the ECS impacts on human adult epithelial stem cell (eSC) functions remains unknown. Scalp hair follicles (HFs) offer a clinically relevant, prototypic model system for studying this directly within the native human stem cell niche. Here, we show in organ-cultured human HFs that, unexpectedly, selective activation of cannabinoid receptor-1 (CB1)-mediated signalling via the MAPK (MEK/Erk 1/2) and Akt pathways significantly increases the number and proliferation of cytokeratin CK15+ or CK19+ human HF bulge eSCs in situ, and enhances CK15 promoter activity in situ. In striking contrast, CB1-stimulation promotes apoptosis in the differentiated progeny of these eSCs (CK6+ HF keratinocytes). Instead, intrafollicular CB1 gene knockdown or CB1 antagonist treatment significantly reduces human HF eSCs numbers and stimulates their apoptosis, while CB1 knockout mice exhibit a reduced bulge eSCs pool in vivo. This identifies tonic CB1 signalling as a required survival stimulus for adult human HF eSCs within their niche. This novel concept must be taken into account whenever the human ECS is targeted therapeutically.

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