March
20, 2003
Researchers Identify Signals that Cause Hair Follicles to Sprout
The delicate interplay of two chemical signals coaxes
stem cells into becoming hair follicles, according to new research by scientists
at the Howard Hughes Medical Institute at The Rockefeller University.
The research has implications for understanding hair growth and hair-follicle
development, and it may also help explain how diverse structures, such as teeth
and lungs, are formed or how some forms of skin cancer develop.
In an article published in the March 20, 2003, issue of the journal Nature,
researchers led by HHMI investigator
Elaine Fuchs
at The Rockefeller University discovered that two signaling molecules, Wnt and
noggin, influence immature stem cells to begin the process of forming hair
follicles.
According to Fuchs, studies in her laboratory and others revealed the
possible involvement of Wnt and other proteins in the signal transduction
pathways that trigger hair-follicle formation. In previous studies, Fuchs and
her colleagues produced an abnormally furry mouse with high numbers of hair
follicles by genetically altering the animals to produce a stabilized form of a
protein called beta-catenin. They also knew that beta-catenin was affected by
the Wnt protein. Among the other proteins they implicated in hair-follicle
formation was “lymphoid enhancer-binding factor 1” (Lef1), which is part of a
transcription complex that controls gene activity.
“One of the aspects that scientists have been trying to understand in
development of hair follicles, tooth buds, mammary glands and lungs is how these
various transduction pathways work together,” said Fuchs.
The researchers also had evidence that a second mechanism, involving a
signaling molecule called bone morphogenetic protein (BMP), is also required for
creating epithelial buds — pockets in the skin that are the precursors of hair
follicles.
Through experiments using mouse skin cell cultures and skin from embryonic
mice with various genes knocked out, the researchers showed that Wnt stabilizes
beta-catenin and increases its concentrations in the target stem cell. In
concert, noggin inhibits BMP, leading to production of Lef1. In addition, beta-catenin
activates Lef1, which in turn downregulates the gene for the protein E-cadherin.
E-cadherin is important in cell adhesion. Reduced levels of E-cadherin trigger
reduction of cell adhesion structures, called adherens junctions, a process
important in initiating formation of the epithelial bud.
“Unlike the earlier experiments, in which we genetically altered the animals,
in these experiments, we have altered the stem cells using external factors that
the skin normally makes,” said Fuchs. “And in doing so, we have been able to
elicit the initial responses that occur in the development of the hair
follicles.
“The other important advance is that we now understand how Wnt and inhibition
of the BMP signaling pathway work together by regulating this transcription
factor complex. The discovery provides insights into how signals simultaneously
operate together to activate a particular event, in this case, a transcription
factor.”
The findings also hint at how different kinds of cells interact to produce
epithelial buds, said Fuchs. “These signals are probably coming from different
cells within the skin,” said Fuchs. “The Wnt pathway is likely coming from
adjacent epithelial cells, and the noggin pathway from mesenchymal cells. But,
they're working together on a single skin stem cell to produce an activated
transcription factor.” Mesenchymal cells are unspecialized cells in embryonic
skin from which the dermis will develop.
“How these signal transduction pathways are merging was not understood
before, and we now have a much clearer picture of why they need to be there at
the same place and time in the developing skin,” said Fuchs.
According to Fuchs, the findings also have implications for understanding how
some forms of skin cancer arise. “Our studies suggest that too much or too
little E-cadherin can be a bad thing,” she said. “Just the right amount of E-cadherin
is needed to loosen the adhesion of the stem cells in the epithelium, to allow
them to remodel and grow downward to form the hair follicle. What's interesting
is researchers have found reduced levels of adherens junctions in squamous cell
carcinomas of the skin. So, we think our findings may be relevant, because they
suggest that if the E-cadherin levels are reduced too much, there can still be a
downgrowth of the skin, but one that's deregulated. The early stages of hair
follicle morphogenesis resemble, to some extent, what happens in the development
of a tumor mass.”
The studies in Fuchs's laboratory seek to understand fundamental aspects of
hair follicle formation, which could eventually suggest new ways to restore or
inhibit hair growth. “These studies raise the possibility that drugs to activate
these natural factors could promote hair follicle growth in wanted places, and
inhibitory drugs could prevent hair growth in unwanted places,” she said.
Among the next steps in the research, said Fuchs, is to understand how the
newly discovered machinery involved in epithelial bud formation links to the
later steps that causes mature hair-producing follicles to sprout.

Hair loss products and Hair loss treatments
|