Human keratinocyte motility plays an important role in the re-epithelialization of human skin wounds. The wound bed over which human keratinocytes migrate is rich in extracellular matrices, such as fibrin, fibronectin, and collagen, and serum factors, such as platelet-derived growth factor and transforming growth factor β1. Extracellular matrices and the serum factors bind to cell surface receptors and initiate a cascade of intracellular signaling events that regulate cell migration. In this study, we identified an intra-cellular signaling pathway that mediates collagen-driven motility of human keratinocytes. Pharmacologic inhibition of the activation of p38-α and p38-β mitogen-activated protein kinase activation potently blocked collagen-driven human keratinocyte migration. Transfection of the same keratinocytes with the kinase-negative mutants of p38-α or p38-β mitogen-activated protein kinase markedly inhibited keratinocyte migration on collagen. Attachment of keratinocytes to collagen activated p38 mitogen-activated protein kinase, as well as p44/p42 ERKs. Interestingly, activation of the p38 mitogen-activated protein kinase cascade by overexpressing the constitutively active MKK3 and MKK6, MKK3b(E) and MKK6b(E), could neither initiate migration in the absence of collagen nor enhance collagen-driven migration. This study provides evidence that the p38-MAPK/SAPK pathway is necessary, but insufficient, for mediating human keratinocyte migration on collagen.
CITATION STYLE
Li, W., Nadelman, C., Henry, G., Fan, J., Muellenhoff, M., Medina, E., … Woodley, D. (2001). The p38-MAPK/SAPK pathway is required for human keratinocyte migration on dermal collagen. Journal of Investigative Dermatology, 117(6), 1601–1611. https://doi.org/10.1046/j.0022-202x.2001.01608.x
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