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Decreased p53 is associated with a decline in asymmetric stem cell self‐renewal in aged human epidermis

With age, the epidermis becomes hypoplastic and hypoproliferative. Hypoproliferation due to aging has been associated with decreased stem cell (SC) self‐renewal in multiple murine tissues. The fate of SC self‐renewal divisions can be asymmetric (one SC, one committed progenitor) or symmetric (two SC...

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Autores principales: Charruyer, Alexandra, Weisenberger, Tracy, Li, Hang, Khalifa, Ayman, Schroeder, Andrew W., Belzer, Annika, Ghadially, Ruby
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7884041/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33524216
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/acel.13310
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author Charruyer, Alexandra
Weisenberger, Tracy
Li, Hang
Khalifa, Ayman
Schroeder, Andrew W.
Belzer, Annika
Ghadially, Ruby
author_facet Charruyer, Alexandra
Weisenberger, Tracy
Li, Hang
Khalifa, Ayman
Schroeder, Andrew W.
Belzer, Annika
Ghadially, Ruby
author_sort Charruyer, Alexandra
collection PubMed
description With age, the epidermis becomes hypoplastic and hypoproliferative. Hypoproliferation due to aging has been associated with decreased stem cell (SC) self‐renewal in multiple murine tissues. The fate of SC self‐renewal divisions can be asymmetric (one SC, one committed progenitor) or symmetric (two SCs). Increased asymmetric SC self‐renewal has been observed in inflammatory‐mediated hyperproliferation, while increased symmetric SC self‐renewal has been observed in cancers. We analyzed SC self‐renewal divisions in aging human epidermis to better understand the role of SCs in the hypoproliferation of aging. In human subjects, neonatal to 78 years, there was an age‐dependent decrease in epidermal basal layer divisions. The balance of SC self‐renewal shifted toward symmetric SC self‐renewal, with a decline in asymmetric SC self‐renewal. Asymmetric SC divisions maintain epidermal stratification, and this decrease may contribute to the hypoplasia of aging skin. P53 decreases in multiple tissues with age, and p53 has been shown to promote asymmetric SC self‐renewal. Fewer aged than adult ALDH+CD44+ keratinocyte SCs exhibited p53 expression and activity and Nutlin‐3 (a p53 activator) returned p53 activity as well as asymmetric SC self‐renewal divisions to adult levels. Nutlin‐3 increased Notch signaling (NICD, Hes1) and DAPT inhibition of Notch activation prevented Nutlin‐3 (p53)‐induced asymmetric SC self‐renewal divisions in aged keratinocytes. These studies indicate a role for p53 in the decreased asymmetric SC divisions with age and suggest that in aged keratinocytes, Notch is required for p53‐induced asymmetric SC divisions.
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spelling pubmed-78840412021-02-19 Decreased p53 is associated with a decline in asymmetric stem cell self‐renewal in aged human epidermis Charruyer, Alexandra Weisenberger, Tracy Li, Hang Khalifa, Ayman Schroeder, Andrew W. Belzer, Annika Ghadially, Ruby Aging Cell Original Papers With age, the epidermis becomes hypoplastic and hypoproliferative. Hypoproliferation due to aging has been associated with decreased stem cell (SC) self‐renewal in multiple murine tissues. The fate of SC self‐renewal divisions can be asymmetric (one SC, one committed progenitor) or symmetric (two SCs). Increased asymmetric SC self‐renewal has been observed in inflammatory‐mediated hyperproliferation, while increased symmetric SC self‐renewal has been observed in cancers. We analyzed SC self‐renewal divisions in aging human epidermis to better understand the role of SCs in the hypoproliferation of aging. In human subjects, neonatal to 78 years, there was an age‐dependent decrease in epidermal basal layer divisions. The balance of SC self‐renewal shifted toward symmetric SC self‐renewal, with a decline in asymmetric SC self‐renewal. Asymmetric SC divisions maintain epidermal stratification, and this decrease may contribute to the hypoplasia of aging skin. P53 decreases in multiple tissues with age, and p53 has been shown to promote asymmetric SC self‐renewal. Fewer aged than adult ALDH+CD44+ keratinocyte SCs exhibited p53 expression and activity and Nutlin‐3 (a p53 activator) returned p53 activity as well as asymmetric SC self‐renewal divisions to adult levels. Nutlin‐3 increased Notch signaling (NICD, Hes1) and DAPT inhibition of Notch activation prevented Nutlin‐3 (p53)‐induced asymmetric SC self‐renewal divisions in aged keratinocytes. These studies indicate a role for p53 in the decreased asymmetric SC divisions with age and suggest that in aged keratinocytes, Notch is required for p53‐induced asymmetric SC divisions. John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2021-02-01 2021-02 /pmc/articles/PMC7884041/ /pubmed/33524216 http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/acel.13310 Text en © 2021 The Authors. Aging Cell published by the Anatomical Society and John Wiley & Sons Ltd. This is an open access article under the terms of the http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Original Papers
Charruyer, Alexandra
Weisenberger, Tracy
Li, Hang
Khalifa, Ayman
Schroeder, Andrew W.
Belzer, Annika
Ghadially, Ruby
Decreased p53 is associated with a decline in asymmetric stem cell self‐renewal in aged human epidermis
title Decreased p53 is associated with a decline in asymmetric stem cell self‐renewal in aged human epidermis
title_full Decreased p53 is associated with a decline in asymmetric stem cell self‐renewal in aged human epidermis
title_fullStr Decreased p53 is associated with a decline in asymmetric stem cell self‐renewal in aged human epidermis
title_full_unstemmed Decreased p53 is associated with a decline in asymmetric stem cell self‐renewal in aged human epidermis
title_short Decreased p53 is associated with a decline in asymmetric stem cell self‐renewal in aged human epidermis
title_sort decreased p53 is associated with a decline in asymmetric stem cell self‐renewal in aged human epidermis
topic Original Papers
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7884041/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33524216
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/acel.13310
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