Original Article

Journal of Investigative Dermatology (1998) 110, 902–907; doi:10.1046/j.1523-1747.1998.00219.x

Towards Defining the Pathogenesis of the Hairless Phenotype

Andrei A Panteleyev*,, Carina van der Veen*, Thomas Rosenbach*, Sven Müller-Röver*, Vladimir E Sokolov and Ralf Paus*

  1. *Department of Dermatology, Charité, Humboldt University, Berlin, Germany
  2. Severtsov Institute of Ecology and Evolution, Russian Academy of Sciences, Moscow, Russia

Correspondence: Dr Ralf Paus, Charité, Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin, Schumannstr. 20/21, D-10117 Berlin, Germany

Received 24 June 1997; Revised 30 December 1997; Accepted 19 February 1998.

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Abstract

Mutation of the hairless (hr) gene in mice causes severe abnormalities during the first hair follicle regression (catagen), resulting in complete baldness. Here, we further characterize how hairlessness develops in HRS/J hairless mouse skin (hr) by histology, histochemistry, immunohistology, and in situ hybridization. We show that, in hr skin, only two defined epithelial cell populations in the distal outer root sheath (ORS) retain their integrity, whereas the rest of the ORS disintegrates. The surviving distal ORS forms the characteristic utriculi, whereas the remnants of the bulge get isolated from other epithelial compartments, but retain the capacity to proliferate and to produce either columnar epithelial outgrowths or selected dermal cysts. Normal dermal papilla structures get lost during the development of hairlessness. Based on the patterns of keratin 17 mRNA and neural cell adhesion molecule antigen expression, and on the distribution of alkaline phosphatase activity, we propose that dermal cysts in hr skin arise from (i) the central ORS, (ii) bulge-derived cells, or (iii) the disintegrating proximal ORS under the influence of dermal papilla remnants. The hr mutation seems to disrupt the integrity of key functional tissue units in the hair follicle, possibly due to a dysregulation of normal, catagen-associated apoptosis and/or an impairment of cell adhesion, whereas the distal follicle epithelium (including its stem cell region) seems to be largely protected from this. Thus, hairless mice offer a unique model for dissecting the as yet obscure functional properties of the hr gene product in maintaining follicle integrity during normal catagen.

Keywords:

apoptosis, hair follicle, keratin 17, NCAM, stem cells, trichoepithelioma

Abbreviations:

AP, alkaline phosphatase; DC, dermal cyst; DP, dermal papilla; HF, hair follicle; hr, hairless; IR, immunoreactivity; MK17, murine keratin 17; NCAM, neural cell adhesion molecule; PBDC, putative bulge-derived cells; SG, sebaceous gland

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