Literature DB >> 10391933

The catalog of human hair keratins. I. Expression of the nine type I members in the hair follicle.

L Langbein1, M A Rogers, H Winter, S Praetzel, U Beckhaus, H R Rackwitz, J Schweizer.   

Abstract

The human type I hair keratin subfamily comprises nine individual members, which can be subdivided into three groups. Group A (hHa1, hHa3-I, hHa3-II, hHa4) and B (hHa7, hHa8) each contains structurally related hair keratins, whereas group C members hHa2, hHa5, and hHa6 represent structurally rather unrelated hair keratins. Antibodies produced against these individual hair keratins, first analyzed for specificity by one- dimensional Western blots of total hair keratins, were used to establish the two-dimensional catalog of the human type I hair keratin subfamily. The catalog comprises two different series of type I hair keratins: a strongly expressed, Coomassie-stainable series containing hair keratins hHa1, hHa3-I/II, hHa4, and hHa5, and a weakly expressed, immunodetectable series harboring hHa2, hHa6 hHa7, and hHa8. In situ hybridization and immunohistochemical expression studies on scalp follicles show that two hair keratins, hHa2 and hHa5, define the early stage of hair differentiation, i.e. hHa5 expression in hair matrix and hHa5/hHa2 coexpression in the early hair cuticle cells. Whereas cuticular differentiation proceeds without the expression of further type I hair keratins, matrix cells embark on the cortical pathway by sequentially expressing hHa1, hHa3-I/II, and hHa4, which are supplemented by hHa6 at an advanced stage of cortical differentiation, and hHa8, which is expressed heterogeneously in cortex cells. Thus, six type I hair keratins are involved in the terminal differentiation of anagen hairs. The expression of hHa7 is conspicuously different from that of the other hair keratins in that it does not occur in the large anagen follicles of terminal scalp hairs but only in central cortex cells of the rare and small follicle type that gives rise to vellus hairs.

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Year:  1999        PMID: 10391933     DOI: 10.1074/jbc.274.28.19874

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Biol Chem        ISSN: 0021-9258            Impact factor:   5.157


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