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Primary Cilia Negatively Regulate Melanogenesis in Melanocytes and Pigmentation in a Human Skin Model

Authors
Choi, HyunjungShin, Ji HyunKim, Eun SungPark, So JungBae, Il-HongJo, Yoon KyungJeong, In YoungKim, Hyoung-JuneLee, YoungjinPark, Hea ChulJeon, Hong BaeKim, Ki WooLee, Tae RyongCho, Dong-Hyung
Issue Date
12-12월-2016
Publisher
PUBLIC LIBRARY SCIENCE
Citation
PLoS One, v.11, no.12
Indexed
SCIE
SCOPUS
Journal Title
PLoS One
Volume
11
Number
12
URI
https://scholar.korea.ac.kr/handle/2021.sw.korea/86552
DOI
10.1371/journal.pone.0168025
ISSN
1932-6203
Abstract
The primary cilium is an organelle protruding from the cell body that senses external stimuli including chemical, mechanical, light, osmotic, fluid flow, and gravitational signals. Skin is always exposed to the external environment and responds to external stimuli. Therefore, it is possible that primary cilia have an important role in skin. Ciliogenesis was reported to be involved in developmental processes in skin, such as keratinocyte differentiation and hair formation. However, the relation between skin pigmentation and primary cilia is largely unknown. Here, we observed that increased melanogenesis in melanocytes treated with a melanogenic inducer was inhibited by a ciliogenesis inducer, cytochalasin D, and serumfree culture. However, these inhibitory effects disappeared in GLI2 knockdown cells. In addition, activation of sonic hedgehog (SHH)-smoothened (Smo) signaling pathway by a Smo agonist, SAG inhibited melanin synthesis in melanocytes and pigmentation in a human skin model. On the contrary, an inhibitor of primary cilium formation, ciliobrevin A1, activated melanogenesis in melanocytes. These results suggest that skin pigmentation may be regulated partly by the induction of ciliogenesis through Smo-GLI2 signaling.
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