Saturday 3 November 2012

THE NEW SKIN EPIDERMAL CELL CYCLE IN CELL CYCLE -open access

The mysterious human epidermal cell cycle, or an oncogene-induced differentiation checkpoint.

Gandarillas A.


Cell Cycle, Stem Cell Fate and Cancer Laboratory; Fundación Marqués de Valdecilla-Instituto de Formación e Investigación Marqués de Valdecilla (IFIMAV); Santander, Spain; Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale (INSERM); ADR Languedoc-Roussillon; Montpellier, France.


Abstract

  

Gandarillas, 2012, Cell Cycle

Fifteen years ago, we reported that proto-oncogene MYC promoted differentiation of human epidermal stem cells, a finding that was surprising to the MYC and the skin research communities. MYC was one of the first human oncogenes identified, and it had been strongly associated with proliferation. However, it was later shown that MYC could induce apoptosis under low survival conditions. Currently, the notion that MYC promotes epidermal differentiation is widely accepted, but the cell cycle mechanisms that elicit this function remain unresolved. We have recently reported that keratinocytes respond to cell cycle deregulation and DNA damage by triggering terminal differentiation. This mechanism might constitute a homeostatic protection face to cell cycle insults. Here, I discuss recent and not-so-recent evidence suggesting the existence of a largely unexplored oncogene-induced differentiation response (OID) analogous to oncogene-induced apoptosis (OIA) or senescence (OIS). In addition, I propose a model for the role of the cell cycle in skin homeostasis maintenance and for the dual role of MYC in differentiation.
PMID:
23114621
[PubMed - as supplied by publisher]