Mackintosh J A
J Theor Biol. 2001 Jul 21;211(2):101-13. doi: 10.1006/jtbi.2001.2331.
A biological issue that has not been satisfactorily resolved is the role of melanin in skin and other animal tissues. A hypothesis is outlined here to account for the evolution of black skin and the ubiquity of melanin in vertebrate tissues. Evidence is presented that melanization of skin and other tissues forms an important component of the innate immune defense system. A major function of melanocytes, melanosomes and melanin in skin is to inhibit the proliferation of bacterial, fungal and other parasitic infections of the dermis and epidermis. This function can potentially explain (a) the latitudinal gradient in melanization of human skin; (b) the fact that melanocyte and melanization patterns among different parts of the vertebrate body do not reflect exposure to radiation; (c) provide a theoretical framework for recent empirical findings concerning the antimicrobial activity of melanocytes and melanosomes and their regulation by known mediators of inflammatory responses.
一个尚未得到圆满解决的生物学问题是黑色素在皮肤及其他动物组织中的作用。本文概述了一个假说,以解释黑色皮肤的进化以及黑色素在脊椎动物组织中的普遍存在。文中提供的证据表明,皮肤和其他组织的黑化构成了先天免疫防御系统的一个重要组成部分。皮肤中黑素细胞、黑素小体和黑色素的主要功能是抑制真皮和表皮的细菌、真菌及其他寄生虫感染的增殖。这一功能有可能解释:(a)人类皮肤黑化的纬度梯度;(b)脊椎动物身体不同部位的黑素细胞和黑化模式并不反映辐射暴露情况这一事实;(c)为近期有关黑素细胞和黑素小体抗菌活性及其受已知炎症反应介质调节的实证研究结果提供一个理论框架。