Fuchs E
Howard Hughes Medical Institute, Department of Molecular Genetics and Cell Biology, University of Chicago, Illinois 60637, USA.
Annu Rev Cell Dev Biol. 1995;11:123-53. doi: 10.1146/annurev.cb.11.110195.001011.
Keratins are the major structural proteins of the vertebrate epidermis and its appendages, constituting up to 85% of a fully differentiated keratinocyte. Together with actin microfilaments and microtubules, keratin filaments make up the cytoskeletons of vertebrate epithelial cells. Traced as far back in the evolutionary kingdom as mollusks, keratins belong to the superfamily of intermediate filament (IF) proteins that form alpha-helical coiled-coil dimers which associate laterally and end-to-end to form 10-nm diameter filaments. The evolutionary transition between organisms bearing an exoskeleton and those with an endoskeleton seemed to cause considerable change in keratin. Keratins expanded from a single gene to a multigene family. Of the approximately 60 IF genes in the human genome, half encode keratins, and at least 18 of these are expressed in skin. Vertebrate keratins are subdivided into two sequence types (I and II) that are typically coexpressed as specific pairs with complex expression patterns. The filament-forming capacity of a pair is dependent upon its intrinsic ability to self-assemble into coiled-coil heterodimers, a feature not required of the invertebrate keratins (Weber et al 1988). Approximately 20,000 heterodimers of type I and type II keratins assemble into an IF. Mutations that perturb keratin filament assembly in vitro can cause blistering human skin disorders in vivo. From studies of these diseases, an important function of keratins has been unraveled. These filaments impart mechanical strength to a keratinocyte, without which the cell becomes fragile and prone to rupturing upon physical stress. In this review, studies on the pattern of expression, structure, and function of skin keratins are summarized, and new insights into the functions of these proteins and their involvement in human disease are postulated.
角蛋白是脊椎动物表皮及其附属器的主要结构蛋白,在完全分化的角质形成细胞中占比高达85%。角蛋白丝与肌动蛋白微丝和微管共同构成脊椎动物上皮细胞的细胞骨架。角蛋白可追溯到进化王国中的软体动物,属于中间丝(IF)蛋白超家族,该家族形成α-螺旋卷曲螺旋二聚体,这些二聚体横向和端对端结合形成直径为10纳米的细丝。具有外骨骼的生物体和具有内骨骼的生物体之间的进化转变似乎对角蛋白产生了相当大的影响。角蛋白从单个基因扩展为多基因家族。在人类基因组的大约60个IF基因中,一半编码角蛋白,其中至少18个在皮肤中表达。脊椎动物角蛋白可细分为两种序列类型(I型和II型),它们通常以特定的配对形式共表达,具有复杂的表达模式。一对角蛋白形成细丝的能力取决于其自身组装成卷曲螺旋异二聚体的内在能力,这一特征是无脊椎动物角蛋白所不需要的(Weber等人,1988年)。大约20000个I型和II型角蛋白异二聚体组装成一条中间丝。在体外扰乱角蛋白丝组装的突变在体内可导致人类皮肤起泡性疾病。通过对这些疾病的研究,角蛋白的一项重要功能已被揭示。这些细丝赋予角质形成细胞机械强度,没有这种强度,细胞会变得脆弱,在物理压力下容易破裂。在这篇综述中,总结了关于皮肤角蛋白表达模式、结构和功能的研究,并推测了这些蛋白质的功能及其与人类疾病关系的新见解。