1. Role of Melanin in Melanocyte Dysregulation of Reactive Oxygen Species
- Author
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Douglas Grossman and Noah C. Jenkins
- Subjects
Keratinocytes ,Article Subject ,Ultraviolet Rays ,lcsh:Medicine ,Oxidative phosphorylation ,Melanocyte ,Biology ,medicine.disease_cause ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology ,law.invention ,Melanin ,law ,Tumor Suppressor Protein p14ARF ,medicine ,Humans ,Melanoma ,Skin ,Melanins ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,Reactive oxygen species ,General Immunology and Microbiology ,lcsh:R ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,Cell biology ,Oxidative Stress ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,chemistry ,Immunology ,Melanocytes ,Suppressor ,Reactive Oxygen Species ,Oxidation-Reduction ,Oxidative stress ,Intracellular ,Research Article - Abstract
We have recently reported a potential alternative tumor suppressor function for p16 relating to its capacity to regulate oxidative stress and observed that oxidative dysregulation in p16-depleted cells was most profound in melanocytes, compared to keratinocytes or fibroblasts. Moreover, in the absence of p16 depletion or exogenous oxidative insult, melanocytes exhibited significantly higher basal levels of reactive oxygen species (ROS) than these other epidermal cell types. Given the role of oxidative stress in melanoma development, we speculated that this increased susceptibility of melanocytes to oxidative stress (and greater reliance on p16 for suppression of ROS) may explain why genetic compromise of p16 is more commonly associated with predisposition to melanoma rather than other cancers. Here we show that the presence of melanin accounts for this differential oxidative stress in normal and p16-depleted melanocytes. Thus the presence of melanin in the skin appears to be a double-edged sword: it protects melanocytes as well as neighboring keratinocytes in the skin through its capacity to absorb UV radiation, but its synthesis in melanocytes results in higher levels of intracellular ROS that may increase melanoma susceptibility.
- Published
- 2013
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