Literature DB >> 19554024

Nestin in human skin: exclusive expression in intramesenchymal skin compartments and regulation by leptin.

Stephan Tiede1, Jennifer E Kloepper, Nancy Ernst, Burkard Poeggeler, Charli Kruse, Ralf Paus.   

Abstract

Cutaneous nestin+ cells are of substantial interest in regenerative medicine. However, the location of nestin+ cells in situ remains controversial. We therefore sought to determine their location in female human scalp skin, using stringently controlled immunohistochemical techniques, Western blot analysis, and in situ hybridization and complementing those techniques with relative and quantitative reverse transcriptase-PCR of enzymatically digested or laser-capture microdissected human hair follicle (HF) compartments. We show here that the immunoreactivity (IR) patterns obtained with anti-nestin antibodies are highly dependent on the tissue-fixation and immunohistochemical methods used. NESTIN mRNA could not be detected within HF-associated epithelial cells in situ or in RNA extracts of the microdissected HF epithelium. Instead, NESTIN transcripts were found only in intramesenchymal skin compartments. Individual cells showing both, specific nestin IR and NESTIN mRNA were detectable in the connective-tissue sheaths of human HFs, sebaceous and sweat glands. Moreover, stimulation of organ-cultured human scalp skin with the adipokine leptin increased the number of nestin+ cells in these intramesenchymal skin locations, whereas no specific nestin IR could be induced by leptin within the HF epithelium, including the bulge. Therefore, nestin expression at the gene and protein levels in human scalp skin is restricted to the periappendage mesenchyme and can be stimulated by leptin.

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Year:  2009        PMID: 19554024     DOI: 10.1038/jid.2009.148

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Invest Dermatol        ISSN: 0022-202X            Impact factor:   8.551


  10 in total

1.  SOX2 and nestin expression in human melanoma: an immunohistochemical and experimental study.

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Review 2.  Restore the brake on tumor progression.

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Review 3.  [Basal cell carcinoma and stem cell markers : Contribution to possible histogenesis?].

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4.  Hyaluronan and fibrin biomaterial as scaffolds for neuronal differentiation of adult stem cells derived from adipose tissue and skin.

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Journal:  Int J Mol Sci       Date:  2011-10-12       Impact factor: 5.923

5.  Multipotent nestin-positive stem cells reside in the stroma of human eccrine and apocrine sweat glands and can be propagated robustly in vitro.

Authors:  Sabine Nagel; Franziska Rohr; Caroline Weber; Janina Kier; Frank Siemers; Charli Kruse; Sandra Danner; Matthias Brandenburger; Anna Emilia Matthiessen
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6.  A novel organotypic 3D sweat gland model with physiological functionality.

Authors:  Patricia Klaka; Sabine Grüdl; Bernhard Banowski; Melanie Giesen; Andrea Sättler; Peter Proksch; Thomas Welss; Thomas Förster
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7.  Adult Human Dermal Progenitor Cell Transplantation Modulates the Functional Outcome of Split-Thickness Skin Xenografts.

Authors:  Natacha A Agabalyan; Holly D Sparks; Samar Tarraf; Nicole L Rosin; Katie Anker; Grace Yoon; Lindsay N Burnett; Duncan Nickerson; Elena S Di Martino; Vincent A Gabriel; Jeff Biernaskie
Journal:  Stem Cell Reports       Date:  2019-11-14       Impact factor: 7.765

Review 8.  Adipokines in the Skin and in Dermatological Diseases.

Authors:  Dóra Kovács; Fruzsina Fazekas; Attila Oláh; Dániel Törőcsik
Journal:  Int J Mol Sci       Date:  2020-11-28       Impact factor: 5.923

9.  Which are the cells of origin in merkel cell carcinoma?

Authors:  Thomas Tilling; Ingrid Moll
Journal:  J Skin Cancer       Date:  2012-12-13

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Authors:  Takayuki Mineshige; Kyohei Yasuno; Go Sugahara; Yoshifumi Tomishita; Namiko Shimokawa; Junichi Kamiie; Koji Nishifuji; Kinji Shirota
Journal:  J Vet Med Sci       Date:  2014-01-16       Impact factor: 1.267

  10 in total

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