Selective Ablation of BCL11A in Epidermal Keratinocytes Alters Skin Homeostasis and Accelerates Excisional Wound Healing In Vivo.
Cells
; 11(13)2022 07 03.
Article
em En
| MEDLINE
| ID: mdl-35805190
Transcriptional regulator BCL11A plays a crucial role in coordinating a suite of developmental processes including skin morphogenesis, barrier functions and lipid metabolism. There is little or no reports so far documenting the role of BCL11A in postnatal adult skin homeostasis and in the physiological process of tissue repair and regeneration. The current study establishes for the first time the In Vivo role of epidermal BCL11A in maintaining adult epidermal homeostasis and as a negative regulator of cutaneous wound healing. Conditional ablation of Bcl11a in skin epidermal keratinocytes (Bcl11aep-/-mice) enhances the keratinocyte proliferation and differentiation program, suggesting its critical role in epidermal homeostasis of adult murine skin. Further, loss of keratinocytic BCL11A promotes rapid closure of excisional wounds both in a cell autonomous manner likely via accelerating wound re-epithelialization and in a non-cell autonomous manner by enhancing angiogenesis. The epidermis specific Bcl11a knockout mouse serves as a prototype to gain mechanistic understanding of various downstream pathways converging towards the manifestation of an accelerated healing phenotype upon its deletion.
Palavras-chave
B-cell CLL/lymphoma 11 A (BCL11A); In Vivo; cell/non-cell autonomous; chicken ovalbumin upstream promoter transcription factor (COUP-TF) interacting protein 1; differentiation; epidermal homeostasis; epidermal permeability barrier; epidermis specific deletion; excisional wound healing; hair follicle; interfollicular epidermis; keratinocyte activation; re-epithelialization; transcription factor
Texto completo:
1
Base de dados:
MEDLINE
Assunto principal:
Proteínas Repressoras
/
Queratinócitos
/
Epiderme
Limite:
Animals
Idioma:
En
Ano de publicação:
2022
Tipo de documento:
Article