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      Melanocytes and their diseases.

      1 ,
      Cold Spring Harbor perspectives in medicine

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          Abstract

          Human melanocytes are distributed not only in the epidermis and in hair follicles but also in mucosa, cochlea (ear), iris (eye), and mesencephalon (brain) among other tissues. Melanocytes, which are derived from the neural crest, are unique in that they produce eu-/pheo-melanin pigments in unique membrane-bound organelles termed melanosomes, which can be divided into four stages depending on their degree of maturation. Pigmentation production is determined by three distinct elements: enzymes involved in melanin synthesis, proteins required for melanosome structure, and proteins required for their trafficking and distribution. Many genes are involved in regulating pigmentation at various levels, and mutations in many of them cause pigmentary disorders, which can be classified into three types: hyperpigmentation (including melasma), hypopigmentation (including oculocutaneous albinism [OCA]), and mixed hyper-/hypopigmentation (including dyschromatosis symmetrica hereditaria). We briefly review vitiligo as a representative of an acquired hypopigmentation disorder.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Cold Spring Harb Perspect Med
          Cold Spring Harbor perspectives in medicine
          2157-1422
          2157-1422
          May 01 2014
          : 4
          : 5
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Medical, AbbVie GK, Mita, Tokyo 108-6302, Japan.
          Article
          4/5/a017046
          10.1101/cshperspect.a017046
          3996377
          24789876
          42f12a9b-0446-4d7f-a296-0eec4a73cdcb
          History

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