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      Compartmentation of Mitochondrial and Oxidative Metabolism in Growing Hair Follicles: A Ring of Fire

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          Abstract

          Little is known about the energetics of growing hair follicles, particularly in the mitochondrially abundant bulb. Here, mitochondrial and oxidative metabolism was visualized by multiphoton and light sheet microscopy in cultured bovine hair follicles and plucked human hairs. Mitochondrial membrane potential (ΔΨ), cell viability, reactive oxygen species (ROS) and secretory granules were assessed with parameter-indicating fluorophores. In growing follicles, lower bulb epithelial cells had high viability, and mitochondria were polarized. Most epithelially generated ROS co-localized with polarized mitochondria. As the imaging plane captured more central and distal cells, ΔΨ disappeared abruptly at a transition to a non-fluorescent core continuous with the hair shaft. Approaching the transition, ΔΨ and ROS increased, and secretory granules disappeared. ROS and ΔΨ were strongest in a circumferential paraxial ring at putative sites for formation of the outer cortex/cuticle of the hair shaft. By contrast, polarized mitochondria in dermal papillar fibroblasts produced minimal ROS. Plucked hairs showed a similar abrupt transition of degranulation/depolarization near sites of keratin deposition, as well as a ROS-generating paraxial ‘ring of fire’. Hair movement out of the follicle appeared to occur independently of follicular bulb bioenergetics by a tractor mechanism involving the inner and outer root sheaths.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          0426720
          4839
          J Invest Dermatol
          J. Invest. Dermatol.
          The Journal of investigative dermatology
          0022-202X
          1523-1747
          13 June 2017
          23 March 2017
          July 2017
          01 July 2018
          : 137
          : 7
          : 1434-1444
          Affiliations
          [1 ]Center for Cell Death, Injury & Regeneration, Departments of Drug Discovery & Biomedical Sciences and Biochemistry & Molecular Biology, Medical University of South Carolina, Charleston, SC
          [2 ]institute of Theoretical and Experimental Biophysics, Russian Academy of Sciences, Pushchino, Russian Federation
          [3 ]Agency for Science, Technology, and Research (A*STAR), Institute for Medical Biology, Singapore
          [4 ]AgResearch NZ, Lincoln, Canterbury, New Zealand
          Author notes
          [* ]Address correspondence to: John J. Lemasters, Medical University of South Carolina, DD504 Drug Discovery Building, 70 President Street, MSC 140, Charleston, SC 29425, USA, JJLemasters@ 123456musc.edu , Fax: 843-876-2353; Thomas L. Dawson, Jr, Senior Principal Investigator, Institute of Medical Biology, Agency for Science, Technology, and Research (A*STAR), 8A Biomedical Grove, #05-04 Immunos, Singapore 138648, Thomas.dawson@ 123456imb.a-star.edu.sg , Tel: +65 6407 0166
          Article
          PMC5545130 PMC5545130 5545130 nihpa880151
          10.1016/j.jid.2017.02.983
          5545130
          28344061
          82e3b11e-1702-4c04-a192-e383be4bd869
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