Current Biology
Volume 9, Issue 7, 8 April 1999, Pages 361-365
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Brief Communications
Caspase activation in the terminal differentiation of human epidermal keratinocytes

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Abstract

The epidermis is a multilayered squamous epithelium in which dividing basal cells withdraw from the cell cycle and progressively differentiate as they are displaced toward the skin surface. Eventually, the cells lose their nucleus and other organelles to become flattened squames, which are finally shed from the surface as bags of cross-linked keratin filaments enclosed in a cornified envelope [1]. Although keratinocytes can undergo apoptosis when stimulated by a variety of agents [2], it is not known whether their normal differentiation programme uses any components of the apoptotic biochemical machinery to produce the cornified cell. Differentiating keratinocytes have been reported to share some features with apoptotic cells, such as DNA fragmentation, but these features have not been seen consistently [3]. Apoptosis involves an intracellular proteolytic cascade, mainly mediated by members of the caspase family of cysteine proteases, which cleave one another and various key intracellular target proteins to kill the cell neatly and quickly [4]. Here, we show for the first time that caspases are activated during normal human keratinocyte differentiation and that this activation is apparently required for the normal loss of the nucleus.

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M Weil and MC Raff, Medical Research Council Laboratory for Molecular Cell Biology, Department of Biology, University College London, London WC1E 6BT, UK.

Present address for M Weil: Department of Cell Research and Immunology, Faculty of Life Sciences, Tel Aviv University, Ramat Aviv, Tel Aviv 69978, Israel.

VMM Braga (corresponding author), Medical Research Council Laboratory for Molecular Cell Biology, Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, University College London, London WC1E 6BT, UK. e-mail: [email protected].