Abstract

Keratohyalin granules were discovered in the mid-19th century in cells that terminally differentiate to form the outer, cornified layer of the epidermis. The first indications of the composition of these structures emerged in the 1960s from a histochemical stain for histidine, followed by radioautographic evidence of a high incidence of histidine incorporation into newly synthesized proteins in cells containing the granules. Research during the next three decades revealed the structure and function of a major protein in these granules, which was initially called the ‘histidine-rich protein’. Steinert and Dale named the protein ‘filaggrin’ in 1981 because of its ability to aggregate keratin intermediate filaments. The human gene for the precursor, ‘profilaggrin,’ was reported in 1991 to encode 10, 11 or 12 nearly identical repeats. Remarkably, the mouse and rat genes encode up to 20 repeats. The lifetime of filaggrin is the time required for keratinocytes in the granular layer to move into the inner cornified layer. During this transition, filaggrin facilitates the collapse of corneocytes into ‘building blocks’ that become an impermeable surface barrier. The subsequent degradation of filaggrin is as remarkable as its synthesis, and the end-products aid in maintaining moisture in the cornified layer. It was apparent that ichthyosis vulgaris and atopic dermatitis were associated with the absence of this protein. McLean’s team in 2006 identified the cause of these diseases by discovering loss-of-function mutations in the profilaggrin gene, which led to dysfunction of the surface barrier. This story illustrates the complexity in maintaining a healthy, functional epidermis.

Highlights

  • Susavion Biosciences, Inc., 1615 W University Drive, Suite 132, Tempe, AZ 85281, USA; Abstract: Keratohyalin granules were discovered in the mid-19th century in cells that terminally differentiate to form the outer, cornified layer of the epidermis

  • The ability to thin-section fixed tissues and innovations in selectively staining cellular components provided biologists with opportunities to study structures of tissues and the organelles within cells. This brief historical review starts with several striking observations made by histochemical and radioautographic analyses of the epidermis, which, as the story is told, led to the discovery of filaggrin and its short-lived but essential functions in the assembly of a healthy surface barrier

  • Sci. 2022, 23, 1455 early days [3]. He did not live to see the dramatic developments that emerged from the investigations of these unusual structures that were already underway in several laboraearly days [3]

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Summary

Keratohyalin Granules and Histidine

Karen Holbrook [1] commented that “morphology is often the starting point of an investigation”. Sci. 2022, 23, 1455 early days [3] He did not live to see the dramatic developments that emerged from the investigations of these unusual structures that were already underway in several laboraearly days [3]. Kimie Fukuyama, while a visiting scientist in Bernstein’s laboratory at the University of Michigan, began investigations of the epiderPauly [8] for histidine The possibility synthesis were of a unique protein exclusively in the layer while [3H]histidine and [of preferentially incorporated intogranular the granular layer the ular layer while the cells are undergoing terminal differentiation was proposed by Berncells are undergoing terminal differentiation was proposed by Bernstein, who had become (Figure 2B) [11,12,13]. Radioautograph newborn epidermis 15 intraperitoneal injection of Figure 2. (A) Human skin stained with the Pauly reagent for histidine [5]. (B) Light microscopic radioautograph of newborn rat epidermis 15 min after intraperitoneal injection of [3H]histidine [12]

Discovery of the ‘Histidine-Rich’
The Short Life of Filaggrin
Mutations
Keratinocyte to Corneocyte Transition
Findings
Another Role for Transglutaminase?
Full Text
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