Robert M. Lavker's research while affiliated with Northwestern University and other places

Publications (222)

Article
Whereas much is known about the genes regulated by ΔNp63α in keratinocytes, how ΔNp63α is regulated is less clear. During studies with the hydroxylase, factor inhibiting hypoxia-inducible factor 1 (FIH-1), we observed increases in epidermal ΔNp63α expression along with proliferative capacity in a conditional FIH-1 transgenic mouse. Conversely, loss...
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Purpose: Single-cell RNA-sequencing (scRNA-seq) was used to interrogate the relatively rare stem (SC) and early transit amplifying (TA) cell populations in limbal/corneal epithelia from wild-type and autophagy-compromised mice. Methods: We conducted scRNA-seq on ocular anterior segmental tissue from wild-type and beclin 1-deficient (beclin1+/-)...
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Identification and characterization of the limbal epithelial stem cells (LESCs) has proven to be a major accomplishment in anterior ocular surface biology. These cells have been shown to be a subpopulation of limbal epithelial basal cells, which serve as the progenitor population of the corneal epithelium. LESCs have been demonstrated to play an im...
Article
EphA2 receptor tyrosine kinase (RTK) is activated by ephrin-A1 ligand, which harbors a GPI-anchor that enhances lipid raft localization. While EphA2 and ephrin-A1 modulate keratinocyte migration and differentiation, the ability of this cell-cell communication complex to localize to different membrane regions in keratinocytes remains unknown. Using...
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Purpose: Progenitor cells of the limbal epithelium reside in a discrete area peripheral to the more differentiated corneal epithelium and maintain tissue homeostasis. What regulates the limbal-corneal epithelial boundary is a major unanswered question. Ephrin-A1 ligand is enriched in the limbal epithelium, whereas EphA2 receptor is concentrated in...
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Pemphigus consists of a group of chronic blistering skin diseases mediated by autoantibodies (autoAbs). The dogma that pemphigus is caused by keratinocyte dissociation (acantholysis) as a distinctive and direct consequence of the presence of autoAb targeting two main proteins of the desmosome—desmoglein (DSG) 1 and/or DSG3—has been put to the test....
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Autophagy and macropinocytosis are processes that are vital for cellular homeostasis, and help cells respond to stress and take up large amounts of material, respectively. The limbal and corneal epithelia have the machinery necessary to carry out both processes; however, autophagy and macropinocytosis are relatively understudied in these two epithe...
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Macropinocytosis, by which cells ingest large amounts of fluid, and autophagy, the lysosome-based catabolic process, involve vesicular biogenesis (early stage) and turnover (end stage). Much is known about early-stage events; however, our understanding of how the end stages of these processes are governed is incomplete. Here we demonstrate that the...
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Corneal avascularity is critical for achieving transparency necessary for proper transmission of light to the lens and visual acuity. Although much is known about angiogenesis and angiostasis, the precise regulation of these processes in the cornea is unclear. MicroRNA (miR)-184, the most abundant corneal epithelial miRNA, has been suggested to fun...
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Genetic variations mapping to 3' untranslated regions (3'UTRs) may overlap with microRNA (miRNA) binding sites, therefore potentially interfering with translation inhibition or messenger RNA (mRNA) degradation. The aim of this study was to investigate whether single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) located within the 3'UTRs of six candidate genes an...
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One of the major adverse effects of topical glucocorticoids is cutaneous atrophy often followed by development of resistance to steroids (tachyphylaxis). Previously we showed that after two weeks, interfollicular mouse keratinocytes acquired resistance to anti-proliferative effects of glucocorticoid fluocinolone acetonide (FA). One of the top genes...
Article
Keratinization of the stratum corneum involves a highly choreographed sequence of events in which granular cells lose their nuclei and become desiccated corneocytes. In this issue, Akinduro et al (2016) detail the molecular machinery underlying removal of the nucleus (nucleophagy) during the final stages of keratinization. They provide evidence tha...
Article
The stem cell niche is thought to affect cell cycle quiescence, proliferative capacity and communication between stem cells and their neighbors. How these activities are controlled is not completely understood. Here we define a microRNA family (miRs-103/107) preferentially expressed in the stem cell-enriched limbal epithelium that regulates and int...
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Cutaneous atrophy is the major adverse effect of topical glucocorticoids; however, its molecular mechanisms are poorly understood. Here, we identify stress-inducible mTOR inhibitor REDD1 (regulated in development and DNA damage response 1) as a major molecular target of glucocorticoids, which mediates cutaneous atrophy. In REDD1 knockout (KO) mice,...
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Factor inhibiting hypoxia-inducible factor 1 (FIH-1; official symbol HIF1AN) is a hydroxylase that negatively regulates hypoxia-inducible factor 1α but also targets other ankyrin repeat domain-containing proteins such as Notch receptor to limit epithelial differentiation. We show that FIH-1 null mutant mice exhibit delayed wound healing. Importantl...
Article
Vibrio vulnificus is an environmental organism that causes both food-borne and wound infections with high morbidity and mortality in humans. The annual incidence and global distribution of infections associated with this pathogen are increasing with climate change. In the late 1990s, an outbreak of tilapia-associated wound infections in Israel was...
Data
##Assembly-Data-START## Assembly Method :: MacVector v. v. 12.6.0 Assembly Name :: BAA87_RTXnt.nucl Sequencing Technology :: ABI 3730 High-Throughput DNA Sequencer ##Assembly-Data-END##
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Purpose: Corneal epithelial cells have large stores of glycogen, which serve as their primary energy source. Recently, we demonstrated that factor-inhibiting hypoxia-inducible factor 1 (FIH-1) diminished glycogen stores in vitro and in vivo, working through the Akt/Glycogen Synthase Kinase (GSK)-3β pathway. In this study we investigated the relati...
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Proper regulation of keratinocyte differentiation within the epidermis and follicular epithelium is essential for maintenance of epidermal barrier function and hair growth. The signaling intermediates that regulate the morphological and genetic changes associated with epidermal and follicular differentiation remain poorly understood. We tested the...
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Notch plays a critical role in the transition from proliferation to differentiation in the epidermis and corneal epithelium. Furthermore, aberrant Notch signaling is a feature of diseases like psoriasis, eczema, nonmelanoma skin cancer, and melanoma where differentiation and proliferation are impaired. Whereas much is known about the downstream eve...
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Corneal epithelium relies on abundant glycogen stores as its primary energy source. MicroRNA-31 (miR-31), a corneal epithelial-preferred miRNA, negatively regulates factor inhibiting hypoxia-inducible factor-1 (FIH-1). Since HIF-1α is involved in anaerobic energy production, we investigated the role that miR-31 and FIH-1 play in regulating corneal...
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Eph/ephrin signaling proteins are present in the corneal epithelium, where their function remains unknown. The authors examined the role of the EphA2 receptor and ephrin-A1 ligand in human corneal epithelial cell migration. Immunohistochemical analysis of EphA2 and ephrin-A1 in healthy and diabetic corneas was performed in concert with linear scrat...
Article
Calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP) is a vasodilatory peptide that has been detected at high levels in the skin, blood, and cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) under a variety of inflammatory and chronic pain conditions, presumably derived from peptidergic C and Aδ innervation. Herein, CGRP immunolabeling (IL) was detected in epidermal keratinocytes at le...
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Limbal fibroblasts are known to regulate the maintenance and differentiation of the corneal epithelium including the limbal epithelial stem cells. This study examined the effect of limbal fibroblast conditioned media in a mouse model of limbal stem cell deficiency. Limbal stem cell deficiency was created in C57/Bl6 mice by performing a limbus to li...
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microRNA-205 (miR-205) and miR-184 coordinately regulate the lipid phosphatase SHIP2 for Akt survival signaling in keratinocytes. As the PI3K-Akt pathway has also been implicated in regulating the actin cytoskeleton and cell motility, we investigated the role that these 2 miRNAs play in keratinocyte migration. We used antagomirs (antago) to reduce...
Article
MicroRNA-21 negatively regulates several targets, thereby affecting tumorigenesis. However, its mechanism of action in human hepatocellular carcinoma is poorly understood, and no direct evidence has shown a correlation between microRNA-21 function and phenotype. In this study, we investigate the function of microRNA-21 as a potent oncomir and probe...
Article
To investigate the effect of microRNA-205 reduction by antagomirs on adhesion ability of normal human corneal epithelial keratinocytes (NHCEKs). Antagomir-205, complementary and inhibitory to microRNA-205, was used to suppress endogenous microRNA-205 in NHCEKs. The adhesion ability of treated NHCEKs was then assessed by cell adhesion assay. Immunob...
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The longstanding concept that corneal epithelial stem cells reside mainly in the limbus is supported by the absence of major corneal epithelial differentiation markers, that is, K3 and K12 keratins, in limbal basal cells (these markers are expressed, however, in corneal basal cells, thus distinguishing the mode of keratin expression in corneal epit...
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Despite their potential to regulate approximately one-third of the whole genome, relatively few microRNA (miRNA) targets have been experimentally validated, particularly in stratified squamous epithelia. Here we demonstrate not only that the lipid phosphatase SHIP2 is a target of miRNA-205 (miR-205) in epithelial cells, but, more importantly, that...
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We evaluated the expression and activation of Notch pathway genes in the adult human and murine corneal epithelium during proliferation. The expression of Notch pathway genes in the limbal and central human corneal epithelium was compared by reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR). Their expression pattern was examined by immunoflu...
Article
One of the major adverse effects of glucocorticoid therapy is cutaneous atrophy, often followed by the development of resistance to steroids. It is accepted that epithelial stem cells (SCs) located in the hair follicle bulge divide during times of epidermal proliferative need. We determined whether follicular epithelial SCs and their transit amplif...
Article
Glucocorticoids are potent inhibitors of mouse skin tumorigenesis. The glucocorticoid control of cellular functions is mediated via the glucocorticoid receptor (GR), a well-known transcription factor. Recently, we generated transgenic mice overexpressing GR under control of the keratin5 (K5) promoter, and showed that K5.GR animals are resistant to...
Article
Transcutaneous immunization allows safe delivery of native heat-labile enterotoxin (LT) from Escherichia coli via application of a simple patch. Physical disruption of the stratum corneum can improve the efficiency of delivery. In the current study, the stratum corneum was disrupted using an electrocardiogram prep pad prior to patch application. Th...
Article
The basal layer of limbal and central corneal epithelium is enriched in stem cells and transient amplifying cells, respectively. This physical separation of stem and transient amplifying cells makes the limbal/corneal epithelium an exceptionally suitable system for isolating basal cells enriched in these two proliferative populations. Prior attempt...
Article
To determine the distribution of slow-cycling cells, which are detected as label-retaining cells (LRCs), in mouse lens epithelium during postnatal development. Pregnant BALB/c mice were injected intraperitoneally (twice daily) with tritiated thymidine (3H-TdR), beginning at 17 days of gestation until birth. At birth, the in utero-labeled neonatal m...
Article
All cells must make ribosomes, in which rRNA transcription is the rate-limiting step; however, some cells may require more ribosomes than others. Cell-type specific regulation of rRNA synthesis has been largely ignored in the past, because of the inability to measure rRNA transcription rate in situ. Here we map rRNA transcription activity in indivi...
Article
In mammals, endogenous, noncoding RNAs, designated as microRNAs (miRNAs), inhibit the translation of a target messenger RNA, thereby silencing protein production. MiRNAs have been shown to regulate many aspects of development and differentiation in a wide range of tissues. Surprisingly, little consideration has been directed towards characterizing...
Article
Using suppressive subtractive hybridization, we have identified a novel gene, which we named early epithelial differentiation associated (EEDA), which is uniquely associated with an early stage of stratified epithelial differentiation. In epidermis, esophageal epithelium, and tongue epithelium, EEDA mRNA, and antigen was abundant in suprabasal cell...
Article
The purpose was to characterize plasminogen activator inhibitor type 2 (PAI-2) expression in normal human conjunctiva in vivo and in vitro. PAI-2 antigen was assayed by immunostaining and immunoblotting of extracts from normal human conjunctival epithelial lysates and conditioned media (CM) of cultured human conjunctival keratinocytes. Immunostaini...
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Over 90% of all human neoplasia is derived from epithelia. Significant progress has been made in the identification of stem cells of many epithelia. In general, epithelial stem cells lack differentiation markers, have superior in vivo and in vitro proliferative potential, form clusters in association with a specialized mesenchymal environment (the...
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When cell populations are incubated with the DNA-binding dye Hoechst 33342 and subjected to flow cytometry analysis for Hoechst 33342 emissions, active efflux of the dye by the ABCG2/BCRP1 transporter causes certain cells to appear as a segregated cohort, known as a side population (SP). Stem cells from several tissues have been shown to possess th...
Article
Corneal epithelium is a self-renewing tissue. Recent studies indicate that corneal epithelial stem cells reside preferentially in the basal layer of peripheral cornea in the limbal zone, rather than uniformly in the entire corneal epithelium. This idea is supported by a unique limbal/corneal expression pattern of the K3 keratin marker for corneal-t...
Article
To investigate the use of a multistep serum-free culture system in developing a conjunctival epithelial equivalent with improved in vitro and in vivo proliferative properties and to evaluate the effect of serum supplementation and culture conditions on the proliferative capacity of these cells. Conjunctival epithelial cells were cultivated on human...
Article
To investigate the in vitro and in vivo proliferative capacity of human conjunctival epithelial cells cultured in serum-free media, and to compare this with current methods that utilize serum-containing media and 3T3 feeder layers. Human conjunctival epithelial cells were cultivated in serum-free media alone, serum-free media with a 3T3 feeder laye...
Article
Corneal epithelium is traditionally thought to be a self-sufficient, self-renewing tissue implying that its stem cells are located in its basal cell layer. Recent studies indicate however that corneal epithelial stem cells reside in the basal layer of peripheral cornea in the limbal zone, and that corneal and conjunctival epithelia represent distin...
Article
Epithelial stem cells play a central role in tissue homeostasis, wound repair, and carcinogenesis. Corneal epithelial stem cells have been demonstrated to reside in the limbal epithelium, while the fornical zone of the conjunctiva appears to be a predominant site of conjunctival epithelial stem cells. Stem cells of the corneal and conjunctival epit...
Article
S100A4 is a member of the S100 family of calcium-binding proteins. Members of the S100 family have been implicated in a variety of cellular events, including growth, signaling, differentiation, and motility. It has been suggested that S100A4 modulates cell shape and motility by interacting with components of the cytoskeleton. In the present study,...
Article
The workshop on Hair Follicle Stem Cells brought together investigators who have used a variety of approaches to try to understand the biology of follicular epithelial stem cells, and the role that these cells play in regulating the hair cycle. One of the main concepts to emerge from this workshop is that follicular epithelial stem cells are multip...
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The objective of this study was to examine whether HCECs express functional proteinase-activated receptor (PAR)-1 and -2 and evaluate the effects of receptor activation on corneal epithelial cell proinflammatory cytokine production. Expression of PAR-1 and -2 mRNAs was determined by RT-PCR in cultured primary human corneal epithelial cells (HCECs)...
Article
The purpose of the present study was to establish and characterize serum-free epithelial cultures of normal human conjunctiva using fresh biopsy tissue. To this end, small pieces of normal conjunctiva were biopsied from patients undergoing routine cataract surgery. Fragments of the tissue were placed in explant culture in medium containing fetal bo...
Article
Hair follicle formation and maintenance involve intimate interactions between follicular epithelial cells and a group of specialized mesenchymal cells known as the dermal papilla. Using the random primer polymerase chain reaction, we have identified an approximately 1.4 kb osteopontin mRNA that is present in large quantities in cultured rat vibriss...
Article
The detergent sodium dodecyl sulfate is a well-known inducer of irritant contact dermatitis. In this study we show that sodium dodecyl sulfate induces the serine proteinase inhibitor, plasminogen activator inhibitor type 2, in epidermal keratinocytes. The enhancement in plasminogen activator inhibitor type 2 mRNA and antigen is observed both when s...
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Mammalian bladder epithelium functions as an effective permeability barrier. We demonstrate here that this epithelium can also function as a secretory tissue directly involved in modifying urinary protein composition. Our data indicate that normal bovine urothelium synthesizes, as its major differentiation products, two well-known proteases: tissue...
Article
Recent data indicate that stem cells exist in many tissues, including skeletal muscle, liver, and the central nervous system, some of them not known classically as having stem cells. The unexpected plasticity and the tremendous disease implications of these findings have created a lot of excitement (1, 2). However, a major obstacle in these areas h...
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Although it has been well established that Ca(2+) plays a key role in triggering keratinocyte differentiation, relatively little is known about the molecules that mediate this signaling process. By analyzing a bovine corneal epithelial subtraction cDNA library, we have identified a novel gene that we named CLED (calcium-linked epithelial differenti...
Article
The location of follicular and epidermal stem cells in mammalian skin is a crucial issue in cutaneous biology. We demonstrate that hair follicular stem cells, located in the bulge region, can give rise to several cell types of the hair follicle as well as upper follicular cells. Moreover, we devised a double-label technique to show that upper folli...
Article
Proteinases and their inhibitors are very likely to function as mediators or regulators of the hair growth cycle. Very little information is currently available, however, regarding the specific inhibitors present in human hair follicles at defined stages of their growth cycle. In this study we have analyzed two proteinase inhibitors, plasminogen ac...
Article
Plakoglobin regulates cell adhesion by providing a modulatable connection between both classical and desmosomal cadherins and their respective cytoskeletal linker proteins. Both plakoglobin and the related protein beta-catenin are posttranscriptionally upregulated in response to Wnt-1 in cultured cells. Upregulation of beta-catenin has been implica...
Article
Basonuclin is a zinc finger protein with highly restricted tissue distribution. It has been found in abundance only in keratinocytes of stratified epithelia and the germ cells of the testis and ovary. We studied the expression pattern of basonuclin in relation to cellular proliferation and differentiation in murine corneal and lens epithelia, two s...
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To examine normal human corneal epithelium in vivo and in vitro for expression and status of plasniinogcn activ:ltor inhibitor type 2 (PAI-2). Normal hiuman corneas were prepared for frozen sections and for culture of corneal keratinocytes. PAI-2 was analyzed by immunohistochemistry and western blot analysis uising antibodies that recognize all for...
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Recently, metabolic enzymes have been observed in both the lens and corneal epithelium at levels greatly exceeding what is necessary for normal metabolic functions. These proteins have been termed taxon-specific crystallins and are thought to play a role in maintaining tissue transparency. We report here that cytosolic NADP+-dependent isocitrate de...
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The epidermis is a self-renewing tissue that must maintain a basal proliferative rate as well as respond to various perturbing stimuli. Regulation of keratinocyte proliferation involves diverse molecules, including growth factors, ions, and hormones. We recently proposed that a proteinase, urokinase-type plasminogen activator (uPA) may be added to...
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In stratified squamous epithelia a critical balance among cell proliferation, differentiation, and death must be maintained in order for these tissues to fulfill their barrier function. Previous studies have demonstrated that plasminogen activator inhibitor 2 (PAI-2) is a product of differentiating epidermal keratinocytes, suggesting a role for thi...
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Using double labeling techniques, we studied the replication of corneal epithelial stem cells that reside exclusively in the limbal zone, and their progeny transit amplifying cells. We show that corneal epithelial stem cells can be induced to enter DNA synthesis by wounding and by TPA. We demonstrate the existence of a hierarchy of TA cells; those...

Citations

... SHIP2 may also act as an oncogene contributing to the malignant potential of colorectal cancer by regulating PKB activation 22 . In stratified squamous epithelia, Yu et al. described that SHIP2 protein levels are regulated post-transcriptionally by miR-205 and miR-184 (which is a suppressor of miR-205) 23 and that miR-205 promotes keratinocyte migration via lipid phosphatase SHIP2 24 . In the latter study, carried out in a keratinocyte model, miR-205 directly suppressed the expression of SHIP2, leading to the increased activation of AKT, followed by the promotion of migration and the repression of adhesion. ...
... Several cytokines and GFs, responsible for cellular communication, are related to the process of epithelial healing. Corneal injuries cause the release of cytokines that act on SCs, which in turn begin to proliferate and differentiate, releasing GFs and repairing the damaged area (39,40) . ...
... Our qPCR results showed reduced levels of K19 expression AN2-LECs. In general K19 is typically considered a conjunctival marker (Ramirez-Miranda et al., 2011;Risse Marsh et al., 2002). Other groups have reported that, in particular, K19 was expressed in undifferentiated cells in the basal layer of the limbus (Chen et al., 2004;Ramirez-Miranda et al., 2011;Schlotzer-Schrehardt and Kruse, 2005). ...
... Primary keratinocytes showed low KLK5 and KLK7 activities, whereas HaCaT showed values similar to cells induced to differentiation by 11 days. For KLK6, a protein that regulates keratinocyte proliferation and migration, 36 primary and HaCaT keratinocytes showed similar activities to KSFM-cultured cells for, at least, 7 days. ...
... The present study suggests that FIH1 is required to repress Notch activity and maintain proliferative potential, while miR-184, by repressing FIH1, induces the Notch pathway and commitment to differentiation. In agreement, FIH1 is preferentially expressed by LSCs where it regulates cell metabolic status (Peng et al., 2013). In FIH1-null mice, the skin phenotype has not been described yet. ...
... the conjunctiva 1 . From the limbal stroma subjacent to limbal epithelial SC, we have isolated and expanded a subpopulation of limbal niche cells (LNC) that express SC markers such as Oct4, Sox2, Nanog, Rex1, Nestin, N-cadherin and SSEA4 2,3 and exhibit differentiation potential into vascular endothelial cells, pericytes, osteoblasts, chondrocytes, and adipocytes 4 . ...
... 7-14 A recent study showed that a 3 0 untranslated region polymorphism is associated with susceptibility to EPF by affecting a microRNA (miRNA) binding site. 15 Despite that, polymorphisms in noncoding regions have not been systematically analysed in any form of pemphigus. ...
... These cells produce high levels of plasminogen activator inhibitor 2 and membranebound complement inhibitors, 67 inactivators of PMN enzymes and antioxidants. 68 Although the cornea and the sclera make up a contiguous layer, the latter overlaid by the conjunctiva, these tissues vary considerably in their immunological capacities. ...
... Increased GC signaling correlated with up-regulation of Dcn in the dermis of MR EKO mice (Fig. 3), consistent with the induction of DCN mRNA levels in GC-treated human dermal fibroblasts (Tiganescu et al. 2013). The up-regulation of Fkbp51 and Ddit4, in the context of the dermal atrophy in middle-aged MR EKO mice is in line with the phenotype of Fkbp51 -/and Ddit4 -/mice, which are protected against the hypoplastic effects of GCs (Baida et al. 2018;Baida et al. 2015). ...
... An exchange of proteins in the soluble fraction between the oldest (central; nuclear) and youngest (peripheral; cortical) cells and vice versa in the lens is suggested from these data [13] possibly as an aspect of LMDP [18] and despite the development of lens barrier in later life [112]. Transfer of some of the proteostatic load accumulating in the oldest lens cells to those with better proteostatic [154] and biosynthetic capacity [155,156] ie younger lens fiber cells, would be advantageous. The proteasome [154,157,158], calpain [159] and autophagy [160] systems all contribute to proteostasis in the lens. ...