CaN19 (S100A2), a member of the S100 family of calcium-binding proteins, wa
s originally isolated in a screen for tumor suppressor genes. Recent work f
rom our laboratory suggests that CaN19 is likely to be an effector of the r
egenerative hyperplasia pathway of epidermal differentiation. As other work
from our laboratory in a human skin organ culture model suggests that this
response is mediated by activation of the epidermal growth factor (EGF) re
ceptor and/or related receptors of the ErbB family, we asked whether CaN19
expression could be increased by organ culture and by EGF treatment of huma
n keratinocytes. CaN19 was strongly induced after 24 h of organ culture, an
d its induction could be blocked by PD153035, a specific inhibitor of EGF r
eceptor tyrosine kinase activity. EGF treatment of immortalized human kerat
inocytes (HaCaT cells) increased CaN19 mRNA levels by 4.5-fold within 8 h,
and a corresponding increase in CaN19 protein was observed by western blott
ing. EGF treatment had no effect on the expression of five other members of
the S100A gene cluster, As assessed by nuclear run-off assay, CaN19 transc
ription increased rapidly in response to EGF, reaching a maximum induction
of 16-fold after 2 h, In contrast, EGF treatment had no detectable effects
on the decay of CaN19 transcripts, which were long lived (t(1/2) > 6 h) in
the presence or absence of EGF, PD153035 also blocked CaN19 transcription a
nd the accumulation of CaN19 mRNA and protein in HaCaT cells. These results
demonstrate that EGF receptor activation selectively stimulates CaN19 gene
expression at the transcriptional level in human keratinocytes, and suppor
t the hypothesis that CaN19 is an important mediator of regenerative epider
mal hyperplasia.