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Letter
Nature 437, 275-280 (8 September 2005) | doi:10.1038/nature03922; Received 18 March 2005; Accepted 8 June 2005; Published online 10 August 2005
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Asymmetric cell divisions promote stratification and differentiation of mammalian skin
Terry Lechler1 & Elaine Fuchs1
- Howard Hughes Medical Institute, The Rockefeller University, New York, New York 10021, USA
Correspondence to: Elaine Fuchs1 Correspondence and requests for materials should be addressed to E.F. (Email: fuchslb@rockefeller.edu).
Abstract
The epidermis is a stratified squamous epithelium forming the barrier that excludes harmful microbes and retains body fluids. To perform these functions, proliferative basal cells in the innermost layer periodically detach from an underlying basement membrane of extracellular matrix, move outward and eventually die. Once suprabasal, cells stop dividing and enter a differentiation programme to form the barrier1. The mechanism of stratification is poorly understood. Although studies in vitro have led to the view that stratification occurs through the delamination and subsequent movement of epidermal cells2, 3, 4, most culture conditions favour keratinocytes that lack the polarity and cuboidal morphology of basal keratinocytes in tissue. These features could be important in considering an alternative mechanism, that stratification occurs through asymmetric cell divisions in which the mitotic spindle orients perpendicularly to the basement membrane5, 6, 7. Here we show that basal epidermal cells use their polarity to divide asymmetrically, generating a committed suprabasal cell and a proliferative basal cell. We further demonstrate that integrins and cadherins are essential for the apical localization of atypical protein kinase C, the Par3–LGN–Inscuteable complex and NuMA–dynactin to align the spindle.
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