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mTOR signaling promotes stem cell activation via counterbalancing BMP-mediated suppression during hair regeneration
Zhili Deng, Xiaohua Lei, Xudong Zhang, Huishan Zhang, Shuang Liu, Qi Chen, Huimin Hu, Xinyue Wang, Lina Ning, Yujing Cao, Tongbiao Zhao, Jiaxi Zhou, Ting Chen, Enkui Duan
Journal of Molecular Cell Biology · 2015 · ▲ 95 citations
Deregulated nutrient-sensing
Stem-cell exhaustion
Altered intercellular communication
Cell culture / in vitro
In vitro
Abstract
Hair follicles (HFs) undergo cycles of degeneration (catagen), rest (telogen), and regeneration (anagen) phases. Anagen begins when the hair follicle stem cells (HFSCs) obtain sufficient activation cues to overcome suppressive signals, mainly the BMP pathway, from their niche cells. Here, we unveil that mTOR(definition) complex 1 (mTORC1) signaling is activated in HFSCs, which coincides with the HFSC activation at the telogen-to-anagen transition. By using both an inducible conditional gene targeting strategy and a pharmacological inhibition method to ablate or inhibit mTOR signaling in adult skin epithelium before anagen initiation, we demonstrate that HFs that cannot respond to mTOR signaling display significantly delayed HFSC activation and extended telogen. Unexpectedly, BMP signaling activity is dramatically prolonged in mTOR signaling-deficient HFs. Through both gain- and loss-of-function studies in vitro, we show that mTORC1 signaling negatively affects BMP signaling, which serves as a main mechanism whereby mTORC1 signaling facilitates HFSC activation. Indeed, in vivo suppression of BMP by its antagonist Noggin rescues the HFSC activation defect in mTORC1-null skin. Our findings reveal a critical role for mTOR signaling in regulating stem cell activation through counterbalancing BMP-mediated repression during hair regeneration.
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- DOI
- 10.1093/jmcb/mjv005
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- 2026-06-11 MST
Cite this
APA
Deng, Z., Lei, X., Zhang, X., Zhang, H., Liu, S., Chen, Q., Hu, H., Wang, X., Ning, L., Cao, Y., Zhao, T., Zhou, J., Chen, T., & Duan, E. (2015). mTOR signaling promotes stem cell activation via counterbalancing BMP-mediated suppression during hair regeneration. <em>Journal of Molecular Cell Biology</em>. https://doi.org/10.1093/jmcb/mjv005
Vancouver
Deng Z, Lei X, Zhang X, Zhang H, Liu S, Chen Q, et al. mTOR signaling promotes stem cell activation via counterbalancing BMP-mediated suppression during hair regeneration. Journal of Molecular Cell Biology. 2015. doi:10.1093/jmcb/mjv005.
BibTeX
@article{zhili2015mTORsi,
title = {mTOR signaling promotes stem cell activation via counterbalancing BMP-mediated suppression during hair regeneration},
author = {Zhili Deng and Xiaohua Lei and Xudong Zhang and Huishan Zhang and Shuang Liu and Qi Chen and Huimin Hu and Xinyue Wang and Lina Ning and Yujing Cao and Tongbiao Zhao and Jiaxi Zhou and Ting Chen and Enkui Duan},
journal = {Journal of Molecular Cell Biology},
year = {2015},
doi = {10.1093/jmcb/mjv005},
}
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