4.8 Article

High proliferation and delamination during skin epidermal stratification

Journal

NATURE COMMUNICATIONS
Volume 12, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE RESEARCH
DOI: 10.1038/s41467-021-23386-4

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG, German Research Foundation) [73111208-SFB829]
  2. DFG under Germany's Excellence Strategy-CECAD [EXC 2030-390661388]
  3. Wellcome Trust [219478/Z/19/Z]
  4. Royal Society [RP\R1\180165]
  5. Wellcome Trust [219478/Z/19/Z] Funding Source: Wellcome Trust

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The study suggests that the orientation of cell division is linked to the stratification process of the skin epidermis, although it has less impact on epidermal differentiation in later stages. The data provide insights into tissue homeostasis and hyperproliferative diseases.
The development of complex stratified epithelial barriers in mammals is initiated from single-layered epithelia. How stratification is initiated and fueled are still open questions. Previous studies on skin epidermal stratification suggested a central role for perpendicular/asymmetric cell division orientation of the basal keratinocyte progenitors. Here, we use centrosomes, that organize the mitotic spindle, to test whether cell division orientation and stratification are linked. Genetically ablating centrosomes from the developing epidermis leads to the activation of the p53-, 53BP1- and USP28-dependent mitotic surveillance pathway causing a thinner epidermis and hair follicle arrest. The centrosome/p53-double mutant keratinocyte progenitors significantly alter their division orientation in the later stages without majorly affecting epidermal differentiation. Together with time-lapse imaging and tissue growth dynamics measurements, the data suggest that the first and major phase of epidermal development is boosted by high proliferation rates in both basal and suprabasally-committed keratinocytes as well as cell delamination, whereas the second phase maybe uncoupled from the division orientation of the basal progenitors. The data provide insights for tissue homeostasis and hyperproliferative diseases that may recapitulate developmental programs. How the developing skin epidermis is transformed from a simple single-layered epithelium to a complex and stratified barrier is still an open question. Here, the authors provide a model based on high proliferation and delamination of the keratinocyte progenitors that support the stratification process.

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