Cell Death Differ. 2006 Jun
Candi E, Rufini A, Terrinoni A, Dinsdale D, Ranalli M, Paradisi A, De Laurenzi V, Spagnoli LG, Catani MV, Ramadan S, Knight RA, Melino G
Abstract
Epidermal development requires the transcription factor p63, as p63-/- mice are born dead, without skin. The gene expresses two proteins, one with an amino-terminal transactivation domain (TAp63) and one without (deltaNp63), although their relative contribution to epidermal development is unknown. To address this issue, we reintroduced TAp63alpha and/or deltaNp63alpha under the K5 promoter into p63-/- mice by in vivo genetic complementation. Whereas p63-/- and p63-/-;TA mice showed extremely rar
...[more]e patches of poorly differentiated keratinocytes, p63-/-;deltaN mice showed significant epidermal basal layer formation. Double TAp63alpha/deltaNp63alpha complementation showed greater patches of differentiated skin; at the ultrastructural level, there was clear reformation of a distinct basal membrane and hemidesmosomes. At the molecular level, deltaNp63 regulated expression of genes characteristic of the basal layer (K14), interacting (by Chip, luc assay) with the third p53 consensus site. Conversely, TAp63 transcribed the upper layer's genes (Ets-1, K1, transglutaminases, involucrin). Therefore, the two p63 isoforms appear to play distinct cooperative roles in epidermal formation.
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Mesh Headings:
Animals, Animals, Newborn, Cell Line, Cell Proliferation, Embryo, Mammalian, Epidermis, Gene Expression Profiling, Gene Expression Regulation, Developmental, Intermediate Filament Proteins, Keratin-14, Membrane Proteins, Mice, Mice, Inbred C57BL, Mice, Knockout, Oligonucleotide Array Sequence Analysis, Phenotype, Phosphoproteins, Promoter Regions, Genetic, Protein Isoforms, Skin, Trans-Activators, Transfection