Elsevier

Developmental Biology

Volume 263, Issue 2, 15 November 2003, Pages 343-359
Developmental Biology

Regular article
Long-range, nonautonomous effects of activated Notch1 on tissue homeostasis in the nail☆

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ydbio.2003.07.007Get rights and content
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Abstract

Using an antibody directed against γ-secretase-generated antigen unique to activated Notch1, we mapped Notch1 activation strictly to suprabasal cells in epidermis, nail matrix, and other skin appendages during normal development. The consequences of Notch1 activation in keratinizing nail cells were investigated in a transgenic mouse model. Ectopic activation of Notch1 in postmitotic cells within the nail keratogenous zone resulted in longer nails. BrdU labeling revealed an increased number of mitotic cells in transgenic nails. The matrix and keratogenous zone expanded distally due to the increase in cell numbers. The mitosis-promoting effects by a gene product expressed exclusively in postmitotic cells indicates a long-range effect of transgenic Notch1 on regulation of nail homeostasis. We demonstrate that activation of Notch1 in the keratogenous zone resulted in ectopic activation of Wnt signaling, the first such evidence in vertebrates. However, we detected little or no β-catenin activation in proliferating matrix cells, indicating that Wnt is at most an indirect mediator of Notch-induced proliferation. These data support the existence of a novel, cell-nonautonomous role for Notch in maintaining homeostasis of stratified squamous epithelia by indirectly promoting mitosis in basally located cells.

Keywords

Homeostasis
Hyperproliferation
Long-range effect
Nail
Notch
Transgenic mouse
Wnt

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Supplementary data associated with this article can be found at doi: 10.1016/S0012-1606(03)00441-X.