Lillywhite Harvey B
Department of Zoology, University of Florida, Gainesville, 32611-8525, USA.
J Exp Biol. 2006 Jan;209(Pt 2):202-26. doi: 10.1242/jeb.02007.
The vertebrate integument represents an evolutionary compromise between the needs for mechanical protection and those of sensing the environment and regulating the exchange of materials and energy. Fibrous keratins evolved as a means of strengthening the integument while simultaneously providing a structural support for lipids, which comprise the principal barrier to cutaneous water efflux in terrestrial taxa. Whereas lipids are of fundamental importance to water barriers, the efficacy of these barriers depends in many cases on structural features that enhance or maintain the integrity of function. Amphibians are exceptional among tetrapods in having very little keratin and a thin stratum corneum. Thus, effective lipid barriers that are present in some specialized anurans living in xeric habitats are external to the epidermis, whereas lipid barriers of amniotes exist as a lipid-keratin complex within the stratum corneum. Amphibians prevent desiccation of the epidermis and underlying tissues either by evaporating water from a superficial aqueous film, which must be replenished, or by shielding the stratum corneum with superficial lipids. Water barrier function in vertebrates generally appears to be relatively fixed, although various species have ;plasticity' to adjust the barrier effectiveness facultatively. While it is clear that both phenotypic plasticity and genetic adaptation can account for covariation between environment and skin resistance to water efflux, studies of the relative importance of these two phenomena are few. Fundamental mechanisms for adjusting the skin water barrier include changes in barrier thickness, composition and physicochemical properties of cutaneous lipids, and/or geometry of the barrier within the epidermis. While cutaneous lipids have been studied extensively in the contexts of disease and cosmetics, relatively little is known about the processes of permeability barrier ontogenesis related to adaptation and environment. Advances in such knowledge have didactic significance for understanding vertebrate evolution as well as practical application to clinical dermatology.
脊椎动物的皮肤代表了机械保护需求与感知环境以及调节物质和能量交换需求之间的一种进化折衷。纤维角蛋白的进化是一种加强皮肤的方式,同时为脂质提供结构支撑,脂质是陆地分类群中皮肤水分外流的主要屏障。虽然脂质对水屏障至关重要,但这些屏障的功效在许多情况下取决于增强或维持功能完整性的结构特征。两栖动物在四足动物中很特殊,其角蛋白极少且角质层很薄。因此,生活在干旱栖息地的一些特殊无尾两栖动物中存在的有效脂质屏障位于表皮外部,而羊膜动物的脂质屏障则以角质层内的脂质 - 角蛋白复合物形式存在。两栖动物通过从必须补充的浅表水膜中蒸发水分,或通过用浅表脂质保护角质层来防止表皮和下层组织干燥。脊椎动物的水屏障功能通常似乎相对固定,尽管各种物种具有“可塑性”来兼性调节屏障有效性。虽然很明显表型可塑性和遗传适应都可以解释环境与皮肤对水分外流的抵抗力之间的协变,但对这两种现象相对重要性的研究很少。调节皮肤水屏障的基本机制包括屏障厚度的变化、皮肤脂质的组成和物理化学性质,以及/或者表皮内屏障的几何形状。虽然皮肤脂质在疾病和化妆品领域已经得到了广泛研究,但对于与适应和环境相关的渗透屏障个体发生过程却知之甚少。此类知识的进展对于理解脊椎动物进化以及在临床皮肤病学中的实际应用具有指导意义。