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Mice lacking the epidermal retinol dehydrogenases SDR16C5 and SDR16C6 display accelerated hair growth and enlarged meibomian glands.

Citation
Wu, L., et al. “Mice Lacking The Epidermal Retinol Dehydrogenases Sdr16C5 And Sdr16C6 Display Accelerated Hair Growth And Enlarged Meibomian Glands.”. The Journal Of Biological Chemistry, pp. 17060-17074.
Center University of Alabama at Birmingham
Author Lizhi Wu, Olga Belyaeva V, Mark K Adams, Alla Klyuyeva V, Seung-Ah Lee, Kelli R Goggans, Robert A Kesterson, Kirill M Popov, Natalia Y Kedishvili
Keywords carotenoid, dehydrogenase, epidermis, hair follicle, meibomian gland, retinaldehyde, retinoic acid, retinol, retinol dehydrogenase epidermal (RDHE), short-chain dehydrogenase/reductase family 16C member 5 (SDR16C5), vitamin A
Abstract

Retinol dehydrogenases catalyze the rate-limiting step in the biosynthesis of retinoic acid, a bioactive lipid molecule that regulates the expression of hundreds of genes by binding to nuclear transcription factors, the retinoic acid receptors. Several enzymes exhibit retinol dehydrogenase activities ; however, their physiological relevance for retinoic acid biosynthesis remains unclear. Here, we present evidence that two murine epidermal retinol dehydrogenases, short-chain dehydrogenase/reductase family 16C member 5 (SDR16C5) and SDR16C6, contribute to retinoic acid biosynthesis in living cells and are also essential for the oxidation of retinol to retinaldehyde Mice with targeted knockout of the more catalytically active SDR16C6 enzyme have no obvious phenotype, possibly due to functional redundancy, because and exhibit an overlapping expression pattern during later developmental stages and in adulthood. Mice that lack both enzymes are viable and fertile but display accelerated hair growth after shaving and also enlarged meibomian glands, consistent with a nearly 80% reduction in the retinol dehydrogenase activities of skin membrane fractions from the / double-knockout mice. The up-regulation of hair-follicle stem cell genes is consistent with reduced retinoic acid signaling in the skin of the double-knockout mice. These results indicate that the retinol dehydrogenase activities of murine SDR16C5 and SDR16C6 enzymes are not critical for survival but are responsible for most of the retinol dehydrogenase activity in skin, essential for the regulation of the hair-follicle cycle, and required for the maintenance of both sebaceous and meibomian glands.

Year of Publication
2019
Journal
The Journal of biological chemistry
Volume
294
Issue
45
Number of Pages
17060-17074
Date Published
11/2019
ISSN Number
1083-351X
DOI
10.1074/jbc.RA119.010835
Alternate Journal
J. Biol. Chem.
PMID
31562240
PMCID
PMC6851290
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