Taxanes are a leading cause of severe and often permanent chemotherapy‐induced alopecia. As the underlying pathobiology of taxane chemotherapy‐induced alopecia remains poorly understood, we investigated how paclitaxel and docetaxel damage human scalp hair follicles in a clinically relevant ex vivo organ culture model. Paclitaxel and docetaxel induced massive mitotic defects and apoptosis in transit amplifying hair matrix keratinocytes and within epithelial stem/progenitor cell‐rich outer root sheath compartments, including within Keratin 15+ cell populations, thus implicating direct damage to stem/progenitor cells as an explanation for the severity and permanence of taxane chemotherapy‐induced alopecia. Moreover, by administering the CDK4/6 inhibitor palbociclib, we show that transit amplifying and stem/progenitor cells can be protected from paclitaxel cytotoxicity through G1 arrest, without premature catagen induction and additional hair follicle damage. Thus, the current study elucidates the pathobiology of taxane chemotherapy‐induced alopecia, highlights the paramount importance of epithelial stem/progenitor cell‐protective therapy in taxane‐based oncotherapy, and provides preclinical proof‐of‐principle in a healthy human (mini‐) organ that G1 arrest therapy can limit taxane‐induced tissue damage.
RNA synthesis can be detected by 5-ethynyl uridine (EU) incorporation and click chemistry. Despite identifying a fundamental functional process, this technique has yet to be widely applied to complex human tissue systems. By incorporating EU into human hair follicle (HF) organs cultured ex vivo, nascent RNA synthesis was detected in situ. EU differentially incorporated across the HF epithelium. Interestingly, RNA synthesis did not correlate with protein synthesis, proliferation or epithelial progenitor cell marker expression. By treating human HFs with the cytotoxic cell cycle inhibitor (R)-CR8, which inhibits transcriptional regulators CDK7 and CDK9, it was further shown that this technique can be used to sensitively detect changes in global RNA synthesis in situ. Together, this work delineates new insights into nascent RNA synthesis within a human (mini)- organ and describes a novel read-out parameter that will enrich future ex vivo human tissue research studies.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.