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Isolation of an “Early” Transit Amplifying Keratinocyte Population in Human Epidermis: A Role for the Low Affinity Neurotrophin Receptor CD271

Roberta Lotti, Elisabetta Palazzo, Marika Quadri, Marc Dumas, Sylvianne Schnebert, Diego Biondini, Maria Anastasia Bianchini, Carine Nizard, Carlo Pincelli, Alessandra Marconi

2022Stem Cells11 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

In the interfollicular epidermis (IFE), stem cells (KSC) generate transit amplifying (TA) cells that, after symmetric divisions, produce differentiating daughters. Here, we isolated and characterized the highly proliferative interfollicular epidermal basal cell population "early" TA (ETA) cells, based on their capacity to adhere to type IV collagen. Proliferation and colony-forming efficiency in ETA cells are lower than in KSC but higher than in "late" TA (LTA). Stemness, proliferation, and differentiation markers confirmed that ETA cells display a unique phenotype. Skin reconstructs derived from ETA cells present different features (epidermal thickness, Ki67, and Survivin expression), as compared to skin equivalents generated from either KSC or LTA cells. The low-affinity neurotrophin receptor CD271, which regulates the KSC to TA cell transition in the human epidermis through an on/off switch control mechanism, is predominantly expressed in ETA cells. Skin equivalents generated from siRNA CD271 ETA cells display a more proliferative and less differentiated phenotype, as compared to mock-derived reconstructs. Consistently, CD271 overexpression in LTA cells generates a more proliferative skin equivalent than mock LTA cells. Finally, the CD271 level declines with cellular senescence, while it induces a delay in p16INK4 expression. We conclude that ETA cells represent the first KSC progenitor with exclusive features. CD271 identifies and modulates ETA cells, thus participating in the early differentiation and regenerative capacity of the human epidermis.

Topics & Concepts

BiologyEpidermis (zoology)Cell biologyLow-affinity nerve growth factor receptorKeratinocyteStem cellPopulationCellular differentiationProgenitor cellPhenotypeNeurotrophinMolecular biologyReceptorCell cultureAnatomyGeneticsSociologyGeneDemographyCorneal Surgery and TreatmentsSkin and Cellular Biology ResearchWound Healing and Treatments