MDC Researchers Identify Key Function Of A Molecule
05/07/07
The skin is the largest organ of the human body. It protects against
environmental influences and pathogens, regulates body temperature,
and protects the body against dehydration. In humans, the skin renews
itself completely approximately every month by constantly shedding the
dead cells on the skin surface and replacing them with new cells which
have moved up from the basal layer of the epidermis. When the skin is
injured, this process is accelerated in order to facilitate rapid wound
closure to keep germs from penetrating inside the body. Researchers
of the Max Delbrück Center for Molecular Medicine (MDC) Berlin-Buch,
Germany, have now been able to show that the signal molecule, c-Met,
which regulates cell growth and cell migration during embryonic
development, also plays a key role in wound healing in the skin. If c-
Met is missing in the skin cells, no new tissue can form and close the
wound. The paper of Jolanta Chmielowiec, PhD student of Professor
Walter Birchmeier, and Professor Carmen Birchmeier has been
published in the Journal of Cell Biology (Vol.177, Nr. 1, pp. 151 - 162,
2007)*.
When the skin is injured, it first scabs over as a first aid measure, so-
to-speak, sealing the wound to keep germs out. Starting from the edge
of the wound, keratinocytes then migrate across the wound. They
proliferate especially quickly, thereby rapidly forming new skin tissue
which covers the wound in a short time. This very fast growing tissue,
the hyperproliferative epithelium, also fills up the wound with new skin
cells so that finally new tissue is formed which replaces the scab.
The signal molecule, c-Met, regulates this migration process from the
edge of the wound. It is a receptor molecule also localized on epithelial
cell membranes. The role c-Met plays in developmental biology has
been studied intensively during the past years by Professor Carmen
Birchmeier and her research team. Interacting with c-Met is a growth
factor given the name hepatocyte growth factor/scatter factor
(HGF/SF) because it was discovered to be a growth factor in liver cells
(hepatocytes). The liver is an organ that regenerates especially quickly
after injury. In cancer research, this factor also plays a key role as
scatter factor, which Professor Walter Birchmeier and his colleagues
were repeatedly able to demonstrate.
The duo HGF/SF and c-Met is crucial in regulating cell migration.
Together, the two are not only released in the liver, but also in the lung,
the kidneys, and the heart when these organs are injured. As MDC
researchers were now able to show, this is also the case with skin
wounds: HGF/SF and c-Met are increasingly released by the
hyperproliferative skin tissue. Hence, this tissue promotes its own
growth. However, while c-Met is normally found in both the skin and
the hair follicles (and in wounds is increasingly released in the
hyperproliferative epithelium), HGF/SF is proven to be present prior to
injury in the hair follicles but not in the skin. HGF/SF is not active in
the
skin until after an injury at which time it is particularly active at the
wound edges of the hyperproliferative epithelium.
With a special technique, the MDC researchers specifically deactivated
the gene for c-Met in mice. They discovered that mice whose skin cells
no longer produce c-Met do not form new skin when the skin is injured.
In mice that still have some skin cells with active c-Met, because these
cells escaped the genetic mutation, wound healing is not blocked.
However, it starts later and takes twice as long as in the normal case.
That means that only skin cells with active c-Met can build up fast-
growing, protective new tissue to close a skin wound.
*c-Met is essential for wound healing in the skin
Jolanta Chmielowiec1, Malgorzata Borowiak2, Markus Morkel1, 6,
Theresia Stradal3, Barbara Munz4, Sabine Werner5, Jürgen
Wehland3, Carmen Birchmeier2, Walter Birchmeier1*
1 Department of Cancer Biology, Max Delbrück Center for Molecular
Medicine, Robert-Rössle-Strasse 10, 13125 Berlin, Germany
2 Department of Neuroscience, Max Delbrück Center for Molecular
Medicine, Robert-Rössle-Strasse 10, 13125 Berlin, Germany
3 Department of Cell Biology, Helmholtz Centre for Infection Research,
Mascheroder Weg 1, 38124 Braunschweig, Germany
4 Institute of Physiology, CharitéMedical University Berlin, Arnimallee
22, 14195 Berlin, Germany
5 Institute of Cell Biology, ETH Zurich, Hönggerberg, CH-8093 Zurich,
Switzerland
6 Present address: Max Planck Institute for Molecular Genetics,
Ihnestrasse 73, 14195 Berlin, Germany
MAX DELBRÜCK CENTER FOR MOLECULAR MEDICINE
Article URL: http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/medicalnews.php?newsid=68629
Save time! Get the latest medical news headlines for your specialist area, in a weekly newsletter e-mail. See
(Author: MAX DELBRÜCK CENTER FOR MOLECULAR MEDICINE)
| << Prev | Pharmacy News Home | Next>> |
|---|
