Abstract

Opsin-3 (OPN3) is a potential key regulator of human melanocyte melanogenesis. How OPN3-mediated regulation of melanocyte melanogenesis is triggered is largely unclear. TGFβ can inhibit the growth of human melanocytes and reduce melanin synthesis in melanocytes. However, whether TGFβ2 can modulate pigmentation in normal human primary melanocytes through OPN3 is entirely unknown. In this study, we constructed a coculture model with human epidermal melanocytes and keratinocytes. OPN3, tyrosinase (TYR), tyrosinase-related protein (TRP)-1, and TRP-2 expression and TYR activity were detected to be higher in cocultured cells than in monocultured cells. Moreover, elevated levels of TGFβ2 were detected in the culture supernatant of melanocytes cocultured with keratinocytes. OPN3 inhibition in melanocytes decreased TYR, TRP-1, and TRP-2 expression and downregulated TYR activity. Our findings indicate that TGFβ2 upregulates TYR activity and TRP-1 and TRP-2 expression in human melanocytes through OPN3 and downstream calcium-dependent G-protein coupled signaling pathways to induce melanogenesis. Interestingly, treatment with the TGFβ2 receptor inhibitor LY2109761 (10 μM) did not inhibit TGFβ2-induced melanocyte melanogenesis though OPN3. Collectively, our data suggest that TGFβ2 upregulates TYR activity through OPN3 through a TGFβ2 receptor-independent and calcium-dependent G-protein coupled signaling pathway.

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