Different responses of epidermal and hair follicular cells to radiation correlate with distinct patterns of p53 and p21 induction

Citation
Sy. Song et Pf. Lambert, Different responses of epidermal and hair follicular cells to radiation correlate with distinct patterns of p53 and p21 induction, AM J PATH, 155(4), 1999, pp. 1121-1127
Citations number
34
Categorie Soggetti
Research/Laboratory Medicine & Medical Tecnology","Medical Research Diagnosis & Treatment
Journal title
AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PATHOLOGY
ISSN journal
00029440 → ACNP
Volume
155
Issue
4
Year of publication
1999
Pages
1121 - 1127
Database
ISI
SICI code
0002-9440(199910)155:4<1121:DROEAH>2.0.ZU;2-D
Abstract
Different parts of the skin respond to ionizing radiation with different se nsitivities. To examine the mechanisms underlying these different responses , we investigated various cellular parameters Ln the skin after exposure of mice to 5 Gy of ionizing radiation. Epidermal cells responded to radiation by undergoing growth arrest, whereas the cells in the matrix of hair folli cles underwent apoptosis but not growth arrest. These distinct responses co rrelated with differential increases in p53 and p21 proteins in these two p opulations of cells; whereas an increase in p53 protein levels was observed in both epidermis and hair follicular matrix, especially in the latter, th e induction of p21 was strong in the epidermis but absent in the follicular matrical cells. Studies using p53-null and p21-null mice demonstrated that the radiation-induced apoptosis in the hair follicles was fully dependent on p53, and growth arrest in the epidermis was only partially dependent on p53 but fully dependent on p21. These results indicate that two epithelial cell types respond to radiation by different pathways that are governed in part by the differential p53- and p21-dependent responses of these cells; h igh-level induction of p53 in the absence of p21 induction led to apoptosis , whereas intermediate induction of both p53 and p21 led to growth arrest.