Journal of Investigative Dermatology Symposium Proceedings

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Substantial Sex-Dependent Differences in the Response of Human Scalp Hair Follicles to Estrogen Stimulation In Vitro Advocate Gender-Tailored Management of Female Versus Male Pattern Balding

Franziska Conrad, Ulrich Ohnemus, Enikö Bodo, Tamas Biro, Birte Tychsen, Bernhard Gerstmayer, Andreas Bosio, Thomas Schmidt-Rose, Silke Altgilbers, Albrecht Bettermann, Matthias Saathoff, Wilfried Meyer and Ralf Paus

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Figure S1 (pdf 81K)

Comparison of the steady-state levels for estrogen receptor-alpha and -beta transcripts in male and female scalp hair follicles by QT-PCR after 17beta-estradiol(E2)-stimulation in vitro. QT-PCR for ERbeta (blue) and ERalpha (green) (Assay-on demand, Applied Biosystems, Hs 00174860, Hs00230957) of total RNA from male and female frontotemporal scalp hair follicles (organ-cultured 48 hours), comparing control and E2-treated (10nM). No significant differences were given after normalizing to the internal standard GAPDH. SEM

Table S1 (pdf 143K)

Gene expression ratios of female human scalp hair follicles after 17beta-estradiol(E2)-stimulation in vitro Using a commercial skin focus chip (microarray), over 1300 genes were screened for E2-dependence. The modulated genes are given with the standard deviation of the four replicate ratios of signal and background.

Table S2 (pdf 139K)

Gene expression ratios of male human scalp hair follicles after 17beta-estradiol(E2)-stimulation in vitro. Using a commercial skin focus chip (microarray), over 1300 genes were screened for E2-dependence. The modulated genes are given with the standard deviation of the four replicate ratios of signal and background.

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