Sundberg John P, Awgulewitsch Alexander, Pruett Nathan D, Potter Christopher S, Silva Kathleen A, Stearns Timothy M, Sundberg Beth A, Muñoz Mariana Weigel, Cuasnicu Patricia S, King Lloyd E, Rice Robert H
The Jackson Laboratory, Bar Harbor, ME, United States; Division of Dermatology, Department of Medicine, Vanderbilt University, Nashville, TN, United States.
Department of Medicine, Medical University of South Carolina, Charleston, SC, United States.
Exp Mol Pathol. 2014 Dec;97(3):525-8. doi: 10.1016/j.yexmp.2014.10.010. Epub 2014 Oct 29.
Alopecia areata (AA), a cell mediated autoimmune disease, is the second most common form of hair loss in humans. While the autoimmune disease is responsible for the underlying pathogenesis, the alopecia phenotype is ultimately due to hair shaft fragility and breakage associated with structural deficits. Quantitative trait genetic analyses using the C3H/HeJ mouse AA model identified cysteine-rich secretory protein 1 (Crisp1), a hair shaft structural protein, as a candidate gene within the major AA locus. Crisp1 transcripts in the skin at various times during disease development were barely detectable. In situ hybridization identified Crisp1 expression within the medulla of hair shafts from clinically normal strains of mice but not C3H/HeJ mice with AA. Follow-up work with 5-day-old C3H/HeJ mice with normal hair also had essentially no expression of Crisp1. Other non-inflammatory based follicular dystrophy mouse models with similar hair shaft abnormalities also have little or no Crisp1 expression. Shotgun proteomics, used to determine strain difference in hair proteins, confirmed that there was very little CRISP1 within normal C3H/HeJ mouse hair in comparison to 11 other strains. However, mutant mice with hair medulla defects also had undetectable levels of CRISP1 in their hair. Crisp1 null mice had normal skin, hair follicles, and hair shafts indicating that the lack of the CRISP1 protein does not translate directly into defects in the hair shaft or hair follicle. These results suggest that CRISP1 may be an important structural component of mouse hair and that its strain-specific dysregulation may indicate a predisposition to hair shaft disease such as AA.
斑秃(AA)是一种细胞介导的自身免疫性疾病,是人类第二常见的脱发形式。虽然自身免疫性疾病是潜在发病机制的原因,但脱发表型最终是由于与结构缺陷相关的毛干脆弱和断裂。使用C3H/HeJ小鼠AA模型进行的数量性状基因分析确定了富含半胱氨酸的分泌蛋白1(Crisp1),一种毛干结构蛋白,作为主要AA基因座内的候选基因。在疾病发展的不同时间,皮肤中的Crisp1转录本几乎检测不到。原位杂交确定Crisp1在临床正常小鼠品系的毛干髓质中表达,但在患有AA的C3H/HeJ小鼠中不表达。对5日龄毛发正常的C3H/HeJ小鼠的后续研究也基本没有Crisp1的表达。其他具有类似毛干异常的非炎症性毛囊营养不良小鼠模型也几乎没有或没有Crisp1表达。用于确定毛发蛋白质中品系差异的鸟枪法蛋白质组学证实,与其他11个品系相比,正常C3H/HeJ小鼠毛发中的CRISP1非常少。然而,具有毛干髓质缺陷的突变小鼠毛发中的CRISP1水平也检测不到。Crisp1基因敲除小鼠的皮肤、毛囊和毛干正常,表明缺乏CRISP1蛋白不会直接转化为毛干或毛囊的缺陷。这些结果表明,CRISP1可能是小鼠毛发的重要结构成分,其品系特异性失调可能表明易患毛干疾病,如AA。