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Hoffmann, R. A wiki for the life sciences where authorship matters. Nature Genetics (2008)
 
 
 
 
 

Retinoic acid and mouse skin morphogenesis. II. Role of epidermal competence in hair glandular metaplasia.

Retinoic acid (RA) has marked effects on mouse upper-lip skin morphogenesis, leading to the development of glomerular gland instead of hair vibrissa follicle, but does not apparently change the dorsal pelage hair developmental program. In order to test the hypothesis that an up-regulation of the beta retinoic acid nuclear receptor ( RAR beta) may be implicated in the alteration of the dermal-epidermal interactions which occur during cutaneous appendage development, RA-treated and untreated skin explants, controls as well as heterotopic recombinants, were made among nasal, upper-lip, and dorsal mouse embryonic tissues. They were analyzed by in situ hybridization with RAR beta 35S-labeled probe after 48 hr of in vitro culture as well as by identification of the morphological phenotype of cutaneous appendages after 6 additional days of culture on the chick chorioallantoic membrane. The results show that only mesenchyme from the facial region can express the RAR beta gene either normally or after RA treatment, depending on its nasal or upper-lip origin. However, the RAR beta up-regulation is unrelated to hair glandular metaplasia, which depends both on a glandular bias of the upper-lip epidermis and on the weakening of hair follicle-inducing dermal properties. The latter occurs in both the upper-lip and dorsal dermis as a consequence of RA treatment.[1]

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