Abstract
We previously demonstrated that human keratinocytes produce and secrete endothelins (ET) which can be strong mitogens for human melanocytes. Ultraviolet B (UVB) exposure highly stimulated the paracrine linkage of endothelins between keratinocytes and melanocytes, indicating that they are keratinocyte-derived intrinsic mitogens in UVB-induced pigmentation. In this study, the role of ET-1 as a melanogen in UVB melanogenesis was investigated in vitro and in vivo. In the conditioned medium of keratinocytes exposed to UVB, melanin synthesis by human melanocytes, as measured by 14C-thiouracil in corporation, was significantly accentuated. This stimulatory effect was reduced by anti-ET-1 to the level of that in the non-UVB-exposed control, suggesting an essential role of ET-1 as an intrinsic melanogen in UVB-induced melanogenesis. In a parallel study, the addition of 10 nM ET-1 induced an increase in tyrosinase activity-in cultured human melanocytes and was accompanied by elevated levels of tyrosinase and tyrosinase-related protein-1 mRNA expression as shown by Northern blotting. Reverse transcription-polpmerase chain reaction of RNA isolated from the epidermis of human skin exposed to UVB revealed that, whereas in non-exposed sites ET-1, IL-1α, and tyrosinase mRNA signals were scarcely detected, UVB-irradiation, with a dose of twice the minimal erythema dose, caused a significant increase in the expressions of the three genes 5 d after irradiation. These findings suggest that ET-1 is an important mediator for UVB-induced pigmentation in the epidermis in vivo.
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CITATION STYLE
Imokawa, G., Miyagishi, M., & Yada, Y. (1995). Endothelin-1 as a new melancogen: Coordinated expression of its gene and the tyrosinase gene in UVB-exposed human epidermis. Journal of Investigative Dermatology, 105(1), 32–37. https://doi.org/10.1111/1523-1747.ep12312500
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