Department of Biotechnology
inStem (Institute for Stem Cell Science and Regenerative Medicine)

Stimulation of hair follicle stem cell proliferation through an IL-1 dependent activation of γδT-cells.

Publication Type

Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

Date of Publication

December 4, 2017

Journal

eLife

Volume/Issue

6

ISSN

2050-084X

The cutaneous wound-healing program is a product of a complex interplay among diverse cell types within the skin. One fundamental process that is mediated by these reciprocal interactions is the mobilization of local stem cell pools to promote tissue regeneration and repair. Using the ablation of epidermal caspase-8 as a model of wound healing in , we analyzed the signaling components responsible for epithelial stem cell proliferation. We found that IL-1α and IL-7 secreted from keratinocytes work in tandem to expand the activated population of resident epidermal γδT-cells. A downstream effect of activated γδT-cells is the preferential proliferation of hair follicle stem cells. By contrast, IL-1α-dependent stimulation of dermal fibroblasts optimally stimulates epidermal stem cell proliferation. These findings provide new mechanistic insights into the regulation and function of epidermal cell-immune cell interactions and into how components that are classically associated with inflammation can differentially influence distinct stem cell niches within a tissue.

Alternate Journal

Elife

PubMed ID

29199946

PubMed Central ID

PMC5714500

Authors

Pedro Lee
Rupali Gund
Abhik Dutta
Neha Pincha
Isha Rana
Subhasri Ghosh
Deborah Witherden
Eve Kandyba
Amanda MacLeod
Krzysztof Kobielak
Wendy L Havran
Colin Jamora

Keywords

Mice
Stem Cells
Hair Follicle
Wound Healing
Models, Animal
Interleukin-1alpha
Animals
Interleukin-7
Intraepithelial Lymphocytes
Cell Proliferation
Lymphocyte Activation