Abstract

Ultraviolet (UV) radiation from the sun is widely considered as a major cause of human skin photoaging and skin cancer. Granzyme B (GrB) and perforin (PFN) are two proteins contained in granules and implicated in one of the mechanisms by which cytotoxic lymphocytes and natural killer cells exert their cytotoxicity against virus-infected, alloreactive, or transformed cells. The distribution of GrB and PFN in the skin has received little attention. However, Berthou and co-workers (Berthou, C., Michel, L., Soulie, A., Jean-Louis, F., Flageul, B., Dubertret, L., Sigaux, F., Zhang, Y., and Sasportes, M. (1997) J. Immunol. 159, 5293-5300) described that, whereas freshly isolated epidermal cells did not express GrB or PFN, keratinocyte growth to confluence was associated with GrB and PFN mRNA and protein synthesis. In this work, we have investigated the possible role of UV-B on GrB and PFN expression in keratinocytes. We found that UV-B induces GrB and PFN expression in these cells through redox-, epidermal growth factor receptor-, and mitogen-activated protein kinase-dependent signaling. Furthermore, under UV irradiation, keratinocytes acquire a significant cytotoxicity, which is GrB and PFN dependent, toward a variety of cellular targets including transformed T-lymphocytes, melanocytes, and keratinocytes. This phenomenon may have important functional consequences in the regulation of skin inflammatory response and in the emergence of cancer skin.

Highlights

  • Human skin, unlike all other organs, is continuously and directly exposed to environmental influences

  • We have investigated the possible role of UV-B on Granzyme B (GrB) and PFN expression in keratinocytes

  • In this study we have demonstrate for the first time that UV-B irradiation induces grB and pfn gene and protein expression in keratinocytes

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Summary

IMPLICATION OF GRANZYME B AND PERFORIN*

Under UV irradiation, keratinocytes acquire a significant cytotoxicity, which is GrB and PFN dependent, toward a variety of cellular targets including transformed T-lymphocytes, melanocytes, and keratinocytes This phenomenon may have important functional consequences in the regulation of skin inflammatory response and in the emergence of cancer skin. The distribution of GrB and PFN in the skin has received little attention except in the context of immune skin disorders, such as in allergy, psoriasis, vitiligo, and lichen planus, or eventually in graft versus host disease related skin injury These situations are often associated with dermal or epidermal infiltration by GrB- and PFN-producing activated T cells.

CTCTCCAGCTGCAGTAGCATGA GCCCTCTTGAAGTCAGGGTG GTGCTGTCAGAGGGGATGGGG
EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES
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