| Literature DB >> 15831758 |
Stephen B Ting1, Jacinta Caddy, Nikki Hislop, Tomasz Wilanowski, Alana Auden, Lin-Lin Zhao, Sarah Ellis, Pritinder Kaur, Yoshikazu Uchida, Walter M Holleran, Peter M Elias, John M Cunningham, Stephen M Jane.
Abstract
The Drosophila cuticle is essential for maintaining the surface barrier defenses of the fly. Integral to cuticle resilience is the transcription factor grainy head, which regulates production of the enzyme required for covalent cross-linking of the cuticular structural components. We report that formation and maintenance of the epidermal barrier in mice are dependent on a mammalian homolog of grainy head, Grainy head-like 3. Mice lacking this factor display defective skin barrier function and deficient wound repair, accompanied by reduced expression of transglutaminase 1, the key enzyme involved in cross-linking the structural components of the superficial epidermis. These findings suggest that the functional mechanisms involving protein cross-linking that maintain the epidermal barrier and induce tissue repair are conserved across 700 million years of evolution.Entities:
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Year: 2005 PMID: 15831758 DOI: 10.1126/science.1107511
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Science ISSN: 0036-8075 Impact factor: 47.728