Analysis of cultured keratinocytes from a transgenic mouse model of psoriasis: effects of suprabasal integrin expression on keratinocyte adhesion, proliferation and terminal differentiation
- 1 February 1999
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in Experimental Dermatology
- Vol. 8 (1) , 53-67
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1600-0625.1999.tb00348.x
Abstract
Many important transgenic mouse models of benign and neoplastic skin diseases have been generated through the use of promoters that target transgene expression to the different epidermal layers. However, more mechanistic studies of the specific effects of the transgenes on keratinocytes have been hampered by difficulties in culturing keratinocytes from adult mouse epidermis and by the low differentiation potential of many established mouse keratinocyte lines. We have used the Rheinwald & Green technique to cultivate primary adult keratinocytes and to generate keratinocyte lines from transgenic mice which have a sporadic psoriatic phenotype due to expression of human integrin subunits under the control of the involucrin promoter. We show that the transgenes are induced when keratinocytes are placed in suspension and that the transgenic integrins are capable of clustering in focal adhesions and mediating cell adhesion and spreading. We also show that suprabasal integrin expression has no direct effect on proliferation of cells in the underlying basal layer, ruling this out as a possible explanation for the epidermal hyperproliferation observed in the transgenic mice.Keywords
This publication has 40 references indexed in Scilit:
- Lack of intrinsic polarity in the ligandbinding ability of keratinocyte β1 integrinsExperimental Dermatology, 1998
- Antinuclear Autoantibodies and Lupus Nephritis in Transgenic Mice Expressing Interferon γ in the EpidermisThe Journal of Experimental Medicine, 1997
- VLA-β1 Integrin Subunit-Specific Monoclonal Antibodies MB1.1 and MB1.2: Binding to Epitopes Not Dependent on Thymocyte Development or Regulated by Phorbol Ester and Divalent CationsHybridoma, 1996
- Suspension-Induced Murine Keratinocyte Differentiation Is Mediated by CalciumJournal of Investigative Dermatology, 1996
- Evidence Against a Major Role for Integrins in Calcium-Dependent Intercellular Adhesion of Epidermal KeratinocytesCell Adhesion and Communication, 1993
- Expression of beta 1, beta 3, beta 4, and beta 5 integrins by human epidermal keratinocytes and non-differentiating keratinocytes.The Journal of cell biology, 1991
- Analysis of fibronectin receptor function with monoclonal antibodies: roles in cell adhesion, migration, matrix assembly, and cytoskeletal organization.The Journal of cell biology, 1989
- In vitro analysis of multistage epidermal carcinogenesis: development of indefinite renewal capacity and reduced growth factor requirements in colony forming keratinocytes precedes malignant transformationCarcinogenesis: Integrative Cancer Research, 1984
- Improved conditions for murine epidermal cell cultureIn Vitro Cellular & Developmental Biology - Plant, 1980
- Terminal differentiation of cultured human epidermal cellsCell, 1977