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Probing the effects of stress mediators on the human hair follicle: substance P holds central position.

Peters, Eva M J; Liotiri, Sofia; Bodó, Eniko; Hagen, Evelin; Bíró, Tamás; Arck, Petra C; Paus, Ralf

The American journal of pathology. 2007;171(6):1872-86.

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Abstract

Stress alters murine hair growth, depending on substance P-mediated neurogenic inflammation and nerve growth factor (NGF), a key modulator of hair growth termination (catagen induction). Whether this is of any relevance in human hair follicles (HFs) is completely unclear. Therefore, we have investigated the effects of substance P, the central cutaneous prototypic stress-associated neuropeptide, on normal, growing human scalp HFs in organ culture. We show that these prominently expressed substance P receptor (NK1) at the gene and protein level. Organ-cultured HFs responded to substance P by premature catagen development, down-regulation of NK1, and up-regulation of neutral endopeptidase (degrades substance P). This was accompanied by mast cell degranulation in the HF connective tissue sheath, indicating neurogenic inflammation. Substance P down-regulated immunoreactivity for the growth-promoting NGF receptor (TrkA), whereas it up-regulated NGF and its apoptosis- and catagen-promoting receptor (p75NTR). In addition, MHC class I and beta2-microglobulin immunoreactivity were up-regulated and detected ectopically, indicating collapse of the HF immune privilege. In conclusion, we present a simplistic, but instructive, organ culture assay to demonstrate sensitivity of the human HF to key skin stress mediators. The data obtained therewith allow one to sketch the first evidence-based biological explanation for how stress may trigger or aggravate telogen effluvium and alopecia areata.

Bibliographic metadata

Type of resource:
Content type:
Publication type:
Published date:
Abbreviated journal title:
ISSN:
Place of publication:
United States
Volume:
171
Issue:
6
Pagination:
1872-86
Digital Object Identifier:
10.2353/ajpath.2007.061206
Pubmed Identifier:
18055548
Pii Identifier:
ajpath.2007.061206
Access state:
Active

Institutional metadata

University researcher(s):

Record metadata

Manchester eScholar ID:
uk-ac-man-scw:107486
Created by:
Paus, Ralf
Created:
17th January, 2011, 16:33:31
Last modified by:
Paus, Ralf
Last modified:
17th January, 2011, 16:33:31

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