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Journal of Lipid Research, Vol 29, 603-612, Copyright © 1988 by Lipid Research, Inc.
DJ Monger, ML Williams, KR Feingold, BE Brown and PM Elias
The end-product of epidermal differentiation is a stratified layer of
corneocytes whose extracellular lipid bilayers provide a permeability
barrier. It is generally accepted that the epidermis synthesizes most if
not all of the lipids found in this tissue and that extra-epidermal tissues
contribute very little to this lipid content. Moreover, the individual
epidermal strata in which epidermal lipid biosynthesis occurs are not
known. To address this question, we examined [3H]H2O incorporation into
nonsaponifiable and saponifiable lipids in individual epidermal cell layers
3 hr after intraperitoneal injection into neonatal mice, and compared this
to protein and DNA synthesis using intraperitoneal [3H]leucine and
[3H]thymidine incorporation, respectively. Lipid biosynthesis was also
assessed by [14C]acetate incorporation into lipid fractions in organ
cultured skin and in epidermal subpopulations. The in vivo studies
demonstrated that the biosynthetic activity of both saponifiable and
nonsaponifiable lipids was comparable to, if not greater, in the stratum
granulosum (SG) than in basal/spinous (SB + SS) layer, despite
significantly lower levels of both protein and DNA synthesis in the SG. On
a mass basis, the SG accounts for about four times the biosynthetic
activity of the combined SB + SS layers. The lipid biosynthetic activity in
vitro also was two- to fivefold higher in the SG, regardless of whether the
epidermis was separated into individual cell layers before or after
incubations with radiolabel. Moreover, this difference could not be
ascribed to increased acetate pools or to elevated metabolism in the SG
versus the SB + SS since the rates of CO2 production were much lower in the
SG fraction. The increase in lipid biosynthesis in SG over SB + SS was
greatest for phospholipids, followed by glycosphingolipids, and free
sterols but was observed in almost all lipid classes. These studies show
not only that mammalian epidermis is an active site of de novo lipid
biosynthesis, but also that this activity remains high in the stratum
granulosum, while other forms of metabolic activity are diminishing. These
observations are consistent with the knowledge that lipids extruded from
the stratum granulosum layer provide the hydrophobic permeability barrier,
and further suggest that elevated synthetic activity in the stratum
granulosum would allow rapid replenishment in the event that the barrier is
damaged.
ARTICLES
Localization of sites of lipid biosynthesis in mammalian epidermis
Dermatology Service, Veterans Administration Medical Center, San Francisco, CA.
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B. Lu, Y. J. Jiang, M. Q. Man, B. Brown, P. M. Elias, and K. R. Feingold Expression and regulation of 1-acyl-sn-glycerol- 3-phosphate acyltransferases in the epidermis J. Lipid Res., November 1, 2005; 46(11): 2448 - 2457. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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