Notch signaling promotes commitment of keratinocytes to differentiation and suppresses tumorigenesis. p63, a p53 family member, has been implicated in establishment of the keratinocyte cell fate and/or maintenance of epithelial self-renewal. Here we show that p63 expression is suppressed by Notch1 activation in both mouse and human keratinocytes through a mechanism independent of cell cycle withdrawal and requiring down-modulation of selected interferon-responsive genes, including IRF7 and/or IRF3. In turn, elevated p63 expression counteracts the ability of Notch1 to restrict growth and promote differentiation. p63 functions as a selective modulator of Notch1-dependent transcription and function, with the Hes-1 gene as one of its direct negative targets. Thus, a complex cross-talk between Notch and p63 is involved in the balance between keratinocyte self-renewal and differentiation. Normal tissue homeostasis is determined by a complex interplay between developmental signals and other cell regulatory pathways. Notch cell surface receptors and their ligands belonging to the Delta and Serrate/Jagged families play a crucial role in cell fate determination and differentiation, functioning in a cell-and context-specific manner (Artavanis-Tsakonas et al. 1999). In mammalian cells, Notch activation is generally thought to maintain stem cell potential and inhibit differentiation, thereby promoting carcinogenesis (Artavanis-Tsakonas et al. 1999). However, in specific cell types such as keratinocytes, increased Notch activity causes exit from the cell cycle and commitment to differentiation (Lowell et al. 2000;Rangarajan et al. 2001;Nickoloff et al. 2002), whereas down-modulation or loss of Notch1 function promotes carcinogenesis (Talora et al. 2002;Nicolas et al. 2003).In the human epidermis, localized expression of the Notch-ligand Delta in putative "stem cells" has been proposed to induce commitment of neighboring Notch1-expressing keratinocytes to a "transit-amplifying" phenotype, through a negative feedback mechanism of lateral inhibition (Lowell et al. 2000). On the other hand, in both mouse and human epidermis, Jagged 1/2, Notch1, and Notch2 are coexpressed in differentiating keratinocytes of the supra-basal layers, consistent with a positive feedback loop between these molecules that serves to reinforce and synchronize Notch activation with differentiation (Luo et al. 1997;Rangarajan et al. 2001;Nickoloff et al. 2002).The best characterized "canonical" pathway of Notch activation involves proteolytic cleavage and translocation of the cytoplasmic domain of the receptor to the nucleus, where it associates with the DNA-binding protein RBP-J (CBF-1, CSL), converting it from a repressor
The Notch and Calcineurin/NFAT pathways have both been implicated in control of keratinocyte differentiation. Induction of the p21(WAF1/Cip1) gene by Notch 1 activation in differentiating keratinocytes is associated with direct targeting of the RBP-Jkappa protein to the p21 promoter. We show here that Notch 1 activation functions also through a second Calcineurin-dependent mechanism acting on the p21 TATA box-proximal region. Increased Calcineurin/NFAT activity by Notch signaling involves downregulation of Calcipressin, an endogenous Calcineurin inhibitor, through a HES-1-dependent mechanism. Besides control of the p21 gene, Calcineurin contributes significantly to the transcriptional response of keratinocytes to Notch 1 activation, both in vitro and in vivo. In fact, deletion of the Calcineurin B1 gene in the skin results in a cyclic alopecia phenotype, associated with altered expression of Notch-responsive genes involved in hair follicle structure and/or adhesion to the surrounding mesenchyme. Thus, an important interconnection exists between Notch 1 and Calcineurin-NFAT pathways in keratinocyte growth/differentiation control.
Embryonic cells are expected to possess high growth/differentiation potential, required for organ morphogenesis and expansion during development. However, little is known about the intrinsic properties of embryonic epithelial cells due to difficulties in their isolation and cultivation. We report here that pure keratinocyte populations from E15.5 mouse embryos commit irreversibly to differentiation much earlier than newborn cells. Notch signaling, which promotes keratinocyte differentiation, is upregulated in embryonic keratinocyte and epidermis, and elevated caspase 3 expression, which we identify as a transcriptional Notch1 target, accounts in part for the high commitment of embryonic keratinocytes to terminal differentiation. In vivo, lack of caspase 3 results in increased proliferation and decreased differentiation of interfollicular embryonic keratinocytes, together with decreased activation of PKC-delta, a caspase 3 substrate which functions as a positive regulator of keratinocyte differentiation. Thus, a Notch1-caspase 3 regulatory mechanism underlies the intrinsically high commitment of embryonic keratinocytes to terminal differentiation.
Noggin ͉ proliferation ͉ skin S kin morphogenesis leads to the formation of an organ that covers and protects the body from external insults and also results in the development of the hair follicles (HFs) that generate hairs, whose phenotype (length, thickness, shape, and color) varies substantially between distinct anatomical sites of the mammalian body (1-5). Hair fiber production is regulated by epithelial-mesenchymal interactions between the HF epithelium and mesenchyme and occurs only during the growing phase of the hair cycle (anagen), whereas it ceases during HF involution (catagen) and relative resting (telogen; refs. 2 and 6-9).
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