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How and Why the Circadian Clock Regulates Proliferation of Adult Epithelial Stem Cells

Bogi Andersen, Junyan Duan, Satya Swaroop Karri

2023Stem Cells17 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

First described in the early 20th century, diurnal oscillations in stem cell proliferation exist in multiple internal epithelia, including in the gastrointestinal tract, and in the epidermis. In the mouse epidermis, 3- to 4-fold more stem cells are in S-phase during the night than during the day. More recent work showed that an intact circadian clock intrinsic to keratinocytes is required for these oscillations in epidermal stem cell proliferation. The circadian clock also regulates DNA excision repair and DNA damage in epidermal stem cells in response to ultraviolet B radiation. During skin inflammation, epidermal stem cell proliferation is increased and diurnal oscillations are suspended. Here we discuss possible reasons for the evolution of this stem cell phenomenon. We argue that the circadian clock coordinates intermediary metabolism and the cell cycle in epidermal stem cells to minimize the accumulation of DNA damage from metabolism-generated reactive oxygen species. Circadian disruption, common in modern society, leads to asynchrony between metabolism and the cell cycle, and we speculate this will lead to oxidative DNA damage, dysfunction of epidermal stem cells, and skin aging.

Topics & Concepts

Stem cellBiologyCell biologyEpidermis (zoology)Circadian rhythmCircadian clockDNA damageCell cycleCellEndocrinologyGeneticsAnatomyDNACircadian rhythm and melatoninLight effects on plantsSpaceflight effects on biology
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