Epidermal homeostasis and repair of the skin barrier require that epidermal keratinocytes respond to alterations of their environment. We report that cellular stress with methyl-beta-cyclodextrin (MBCD), a molecule that extracts membrane cholesterol and thereby disrupts the structure of lipid rafts, strongly induces the synthesis of heparin-binding EGF-like growth factor (HB-EGF) in keratinocytes through the activation of p38 mitogen-activated protein kinase. Interesting parallels between lipid raft disruption and oxidative stress can be drawn as hydrogen peroxide induces p38 activation and HB-EGF synthesis in keratinocytes. Consistent with other studies, we show increased HB-EGF expression in keratinocytes located at the margin of wounded skin areas. Analyzing cultured keratinocytes exposed to rhHB-EGF, we report increased HB-EGF mRNA levels and alterations in the expression of differentiation markers. Interestingly, identical alterations in differentiation markers are shown to occur in vivo at the wound margin and in HB-EGF-treated cultures. In addition, in vitro sectioning of skin samples also induces the expression of HB-EGF at the border of the incisions. Altogether, our data suggest that expression of HB-EGF is a marker of the keratinocyte's response to a challenging environment and demonstrate that this growth factor alters the phenotype of keratinocytes in a manner similar to that observed during epidermal repair.
Lipid rafts are cholesterol-rich cell signaling platforms, and their physiological role can be explored by cholesterol depletion. To characterize transcriptional changes ongoing after lipid raft disruption in epidermal keratinocytes, a cell type that synthesizes its cholesterol in situ, we performed whole-genome expression profiling. Microarray results show that over 3,000 genes are differentially regulated. In particular, IL-8, urokinase-like plasminogen activator receptor, and metalloproteinases are highly upregulated after cholesterol extraction. Quantitative reverse transcriptase PCR validation and protein release measurements demonstrate the physiological relevance of microarray data. Major enriched terms and functions, determined by Ingenuity Pathways Analysis, identify cholesterol biosynthesis as a major function, illustrating the specificity of keratinocyte response toward cholesterol depletion. Moreover, the inflammatory skin disorder atopic dermatitis (AD) is identified as the disease most closely associated with the profile of lipid raft-disrupted keratinocytes. This finding is confirmed in skin of AD patients, in whom transcript levels of major lipid raft target genes are similarly regulated in lesional atopic skin, compared with non-lesional and normal skin. Thus, lipid raft disruption evokes typical features of AD, thereby suggesting that lipid raft organization and signaling could be perturbed in atopic keratinocytes.
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