4.6 Article

Dual nature of mouse periderm structure, function and fate

Journal

EXPERIMENTAL DERMATOLOGY
Volume 31, Issue 7, Pages 1102-1108

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/exd.14608

Keywords

amniotic fluid; embryonic epidermis; mammalian evolution; mouse skin; skin development

Categories

Funding

  1. National Research Center Kurchatov Institute

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The periderm in mice is bilayered, with an outer layer containing microvilli and an inner layer with specific granules. The shedding patterns differ for the two layers, with the outer periderm shedding in utero and the inner periderm retained postnatally.
The periderm is the outer layer of embryonic skin, which is essential for the development of the epidermis and the establishment of its barrier function. In humans, the periderm is a monolayer and is shed prenatally. The structure and fate of the mouse periderm remain puzzling. Using electron microscopy of mouse skin between the embryonic day 14.5 and the postnatal Day 2, we have assessed the periderm structure and its shedding patterns. In contrast to human periderm, the mouse periderm appears to be bilayered, comprising a presumably absorptive outer periderm with numerous microvilli and an inner periderm packed with specific (glycogen-containing?) granules. The desmosomes between the inner periderm and the underlying epidermis are scarce, and they are totally absent between the inner and the outer periderm. The inner and outer periderms in mice are shed at different stages of development: the outer periderm is shed in utero in conjunction with barrier acquisition (E16-18), while the inner periderm is retained postnatally. We assume that the bilayered structure of the mouse periderm and the postnatal retention of its inner layer represent the evolutionary adaptations in ancestral rodents which helps altricial newborns of their extant descendants to cope with acute dehydration right after birth and/or provides a substrate for proper bacterial colonization of newborn skin.

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