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Differential Effects of Desmoglein 1 and Desmoglein 3 on Desmosome Formation.

Authors :
Hanakawa, Yasushi
Amagai, Masayuki
Shirakata, Yuji
Yahata, Yoko
Tokumaru, Sho
Yamasaki, Kenshi
Tohyama, Mikiko
Sayama, Koji
Hashimoto, Koji
Source :
Journal of Investigative Dermatology. Dec2002, Vol. 119 Issue 6, p1231-1236. 6p.
Publication Year :
2002

Abstract

The desmoglein plays an important part in the formation of desmosomes. We constructed recombinant adenoviruses containing desmoglein 1 and desmoglein 3 derivatives partly lacking the extracellular domain (desmoglein 1ΔEC and desmoglein 3ΔEC, respectively), and full-length desmoglein 1 and desmoglein 3 and studied the involvement of desmoglein 1 and desmoglein 3 in desmosome formation. During low-level expression of desmoglein 3ΔEC in transduced HaCaT cells, keratin insertion at cell–cell contact sites was only partially inhibited and desmoplakin was partially stained at cell–cell contact sites. Low-level expression of desmoglein 1ΔEC, however, resulted in complete inhibition of keratin insertion at the cell–cell contact sites, and desmoplakin was stained in perinuclear dots. These results indicate the dominant-negative effect of desmoglein 1ΔEC on desmosome formation was stronger than that of desmoglein 3ΔEC. Desmoglein 1ΔEC coprecipitated plakoglobin to approximately the same extent as desmoglein 3ΔEC. Therefore, we conclude that the dominant-negative effect of desmoglein 1ΔEC is not simply due to plakoglobin sequestration. On the other hand, during low-level expression of full-length desmoglein 3 and desmoglein 1, they both colocalized with desmoplakin. During high-level expression, however, keratin insertion at cell–cell contact sites was inhibited in desmoglein 1 but not in desmoglein 3, and desmoplakin was stained at cell–cell contact sites in desmoglein 3 but not in desmoglein 1. These data suggest desmoglein 1 and desmoglein 3 expressed at low level were incorporated into desmosome but at high-level expression, desmoglein 1 disrupted desmosomes but desmoglein 3 did not. Our findings provide biologic evidence that desmoglein 1 and desmoglein 3 play a different functional role in cell–cell adhesion of keratinocytes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
0022202X
Volume :
119
Issue :
6
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Journal of Investigative Dermatology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
8688136
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1046/j.1523-1747.2002.19648.x