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Vol. 12, Issue 11, 3439-3450, November 2001
Departments of Biological Chemistry and Dermatology, The Johns
Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland 21205
The process of wound repair in adult skin is complex, involving
dermal contraction and epithelial migration to repair the lesion and
restore the skin's barrier properties. At the wound edge,
keratinocytes undergo many changes that engender an epithelialization behavior. The type II keratin 6 and type I keratins 16 and 17 are
induced well before cell migration begins, but the role of these
proteins is not understood. Forced expression of human K16 in skin
epithelia of transgenic mice has been shown to cause dose-dependent skin lesions concomitant with alterations in keratin filament organization and in cell adhesion. Here we show, with the use of a
quantitative assay, that these transgenic mice show a delay in the
closure of full-thickness skin wounds in situ compared with wild-type
and low-expressing K16 transgenic mice. We adapted and validated an ex
vivo skin explant culture system to better assess epithelialization in
a wound-like environment. Transgenic K16 explants exhibit a significant
reduction of keratinocyte outgrowth in this setting. This delay is
transgene dose-dependent, and is more severe when K16 is expressed in
mitotic compared with post-mitotic keratinocytes. Various lines of
evidence suggest that the mechanism(s) involved is complex and not
strictly cell autonomous. These findings have important implications
for the function of K16 in vivo.
Corresponding author. E-mail address:
coulombe{at}jhmi.edu.
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