A defective permeability barrier leads to the penetration of environmental allergens into the skin and initiates immunological reactions and inflammation crucially involved in the pathogenesis of atopic dermatitis (AD). Decreased stratum corneum ceramide content may cause the defect in permeability barrier function consistently found in AD. Acid and neutral sphingomyelinase (A- and N-SMase) generate ceramides with structural and signal transduction functions in epidermal proliferation and differentiation. We determined epidermal SMase activities, DNA synthesis, involucrin, loricrin, filaggrin, and keratin expression in lesional and non-lesional skin of AD patients. We found decreased epidermal A-SMase activity in lesional and non-lesional skin, correlating with reduced stratum corneum ceramide content and disturbed barrier function. N-SMase activity was reduced in non-lesional skin and more significantly reduced in lesional skin, correlating with impaired expression of cornified envelope proteins and keratins, important for skin barrier function. Changes in involucrin, loricrin, filaggrin, keratin K 5 (basal) and K 16 (proliferation associated) were noticed in non-lesional and lesional skin, whereas changes in K 10 (suprabasal), K 6 (proliferation associated), and K 17 (inflammation associated) were found only in lesional skin. In summary, reduction in SMase-generating ceramides and impaired differentiation are involved in the defective barrier function found in AD.
Nidogen 1 and 2 are basement membrane glycoproteins, and previous biochemical and functional studies indicate that they may play a crucial role in basement membrane assembly. While they show a divergent expression pattern in certain adult tissues, both have a similar distribution during development. Gene knockout studies in mice demonstrated that the loss of either isoform has no effect on basement membrane formation and organ development, suggesting complementary functions. Here, we show that this is indeed the case. Deficiency of both nidogens in mice resulted in perinatal lethality. Nidogen 1 and 2 do not appear to be crucial in establishing tissue architecture during organ development; instead, they are essential for late stages of lung development and for maintenance and/or integrity of cardiac tissue. These organ defects are not compatible with postnatal survival. Ultrastructural analysis suggests that the phenotypes directly result from basement membrane changes. However, despite the ubiquitous presence of nidogens in basement membranes, defects do not occur in all tissues or in all basement membranes, suggesting a varying spectrum of roles for nidogens in the basement membrane.
Activation of osteoclasts and their acidification-dependent resorption of bone is thought to maintain proper serum calcium levels. Here we show that osteoclast dysfunction alone does not generally affect calcium homeostasis. Indeed, mice deficient in Src, encoding a tyrosine kinase critical for osteoclast activity, show signs of osteopetrosis, but without hypocalcemia or defects in bone mineralization. Mice deficient in Cckbr, encoding a gastrin receptor that affects acid secretion by parietal cells, have the expected defects in gastric acidification but also secondary hyperparathyroidism and osteoporosis and modest hypocalcemia. These results suggest that alterations in calcium homeostasis can be driven by defects in gastric acidification, especially given that calcium gluconate supplementation fully rescues the phenotype of the Cckbr-mutant mice. Finally, mice deficient in Tcirg1, encoding a subunit of the vacuolar proton pump specifically expressed in both osteoclasts and parietal cells, show hypocalcemia and osteopetrorickets. Although neither Src- nor Cckbr-deficient mice have this latter phenotype, the combined deficiency of both genes results in osteopetrorickets. Thus, we find that osteopetrosis and osteopetrorickets are distinct phenotypes, depending on the site or sites of defective acidification.
Canonical Wnt signaling through Fzd8 and β-catenin negatively regulates osteoclast differentiation and reduces bone resorption independent of osteoprotegerin.
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