Abstract
The hair follicle is an epidermal derivative that undergoes cycles of growth, involution, and rest. The hair cycle has well-orchestrated kinetics regulated by interactions between mesenchymal and epithelial cells, although the intracellular signals remain unclear. We previously established keratinocyte-specific Stat3-disrupted mice, by which we demonstrated that signal transducer and activator of transcription 3 (Stat3) is required for wound healing and anagen progression in the hair cycle. Growth factor-dependent migration of Stat3-disrupted keratinocytes was severely impaired, suggesting that not only wound healing but also telogen-to-anagen progression required organized keratinocyte migration in response to mesenchymal stimuli. In the present study, to examine whether Stat3 activation in keratinocytes is a prerequisite for hair cycle progression, we applied methods for experimental anagen induction to Stat3-disrupted mice. It was demonstrated that anagen was successfully induced in Stat3-disrupted as well as wild-type mice by chemical or mechanical stimulation, i.e. , by topical application of phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate (PMA) or by hair plucking, respectively. This result indicated that anagen in these methods occurred in the absence of Stat3. Furthermore, PMA stimulated the migration of Stat3-disrupted keratinocytes in vitro, supporting a hypothesis that the protein kinase C (PKC) and Stat3 pathways occur independently in the postnatal anagen induction. Both Stat3-dependent and -independent migration of keratinocytes was inhibited by a phosphoinositide 3-kinase (PI3K) inhibitor, wortmannin. Therefore, we infer that entry into anagen is mediated by at least two distinct signaling pathways: Stat3-dependent pathway for spontaneous hair cycling and Stat3-independent (probably PKC-dependent) pathway for exogenously induced hair cycling, whereas both pathways require PI3K activation.
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