Abstract

Several studies focused on the characterization of bulge keratinocytes have proved that they are multipotent stem cells, being recruited not only to regenerate the hair follicle itself, but also the sebaceous gland and the epidermis. However, due to the difficulty in preparing transplantable cell sheets harvested with conventional enzymatic digestion, there is still no direct evidence of the bulge stem cells’ multipotency. Whether they can respond to adult dermal papilla (DP) signals in recombination experiments also remains unclear. In this study, we addressed this problem by culturing and detaching intact bulge keratinocyte sheets from thermo-responsive culture dishes, only by reducing its temperature. When sheets of mass cultured bulge keratinocytes isolated from rat vibrissa follicles were recombined with fresh adult DPs and sole skin dermis in vivo, regeneration of epidermis and sebaceous gland-like structures, and formation of hair bulb with differentiating inner root sheath and hair cuticle were observed within 3 weeks. However, regardless the expression of stem cells markers like CD34, SA1004 and SA1006, no structures were observed when cloned bulge keratinocytes were used to prepare cell sheets and recombinants, revealing the possible existence of monoclonal stem cells within the bulge region. This report is the first to succeed in harvesting adult bulge keratinocyte sheets. Using these sheets it is demonstrated that bulge stem cells directly respond to adult DP signals to induce hair bulb formation in vivo.

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