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Human skin aging is associated with increased expression of the histone variant H2A.J in the epidermis
Claudia E. Rübe, Caroline Bäumert, Nadine Schuler, Anna Isermann, Zoé Schmal, Matthias Glanemann, Carl Mann, Harry Scherthan
npj Aging and Mechanisms of Disease · 2021 · ▲ 70 citations
Genomic instability
Telomere attrition
Epigenetic alterations
Cellular senescence
Stem-cell exhaustion
Human
Abstract
Abstract Cellular senescence(definition) is an irreversible growth arrest that occurs as a result of damaging stimuli, including DNA damage and/or telomere(definition) shortening. Here, we investigate histone variant H2A.J as a new biomarker to detect senescent cells during human skin aging. Skin biopsies from healthy volunteers of different ages (18–90 years) were analyzed for H2A.J expression and other parameters involved in triggering and/or maintaining cellular senescence. In the epidermis, the proportions of H2A.J-expressing keratinocytes increased from ≈20% in young to ≈60% in aged skin. Inverse correlations between Ki67- and H2A.J staining in germinative layers may reflect that H2A.J-expressing cells having lost their capacity to divide. As cellular senescence is triggered by DNA-damage signals, persistent 53BP1-foci, telomere lengths, and telomere-associated damage foci were analyzed in epidermal keratinocytes. Only slight age-related telomere attrition and few persistent nuclear 53BP1-foci, occasionally colocalizing with telomeres, suggest that unprotected telomeres are not a significant cause of senescence during skin aging. Quantification of integrin-α6+ basal cells suggests that the number and function of stem/progenitor cells decreased during aging and their altered proliferation capacities resulted in diminished tissue renewal with epidermal thinning. Collectively, our findings suggest that H2A.J is a sensitive marker of epidermal aging in human skin.
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- 10.1038/s41514-021-00060-z
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- 2026-06-02 MST
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APA
Rübe, C.E., Bäumert, C., Schuler, N., Isermann, A., Schmal, Z., Glanemann, M., Mann, C., & Scherthan, H. (2021). Human skin aging is associated with increased expression of the histone variant H2A.J in the epidermis. <em>npj Aging and Mechanisms of Disease</em>. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41514-021-00060-z
Vancouver
Rübe CE, Bäumert C, Schuler N, Isermann A, Schmal Z, Glanemann M, et al. Human skin aging is associated with increased expression of the histone variant H2A.J in the epidermis. npj Aging and Mechanisms of Disease. 2021. doi:10.1038/s41514-021-00060-z.
BibTeX
@article{claudia2021Humans,
title = {Human skin aging is associated with increased expression of the histone variant H2A.J in the epidermis},
author = {Claudia E. Rübe and Caroline Bäumert and Nadine Schuler and Anna Isermann and Zoé Schmal and Matthias Glanemann and Carl Mann and Harry Scherthan},
journal = {npj Aging and Mechanisms of Disease},
year = {2021},
doi = {10.1038/s41514-021-00060-z},
}
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