A faggyúmirigyek és az akne (kór)élettanának új aspektusai(BO/00660/21/5) Támogató:
MTA Bolyai pályázat
A faggyúmirigyek és az akne (kór)élettanának vizsgálata(ÚNKP-23-5-DE-477) Támogató:
NKFIH
BigData-technológiával támogatott UDBD-Health adattárház fejlesztése és üzemeltetése(TKP2021-NKTA-34)
Támogató: NKFIH
(“Momentum” proof-of-concept fund (Debreceni Egyetem ÁOK)) Támogató: Debreceni Egyetem
Szakterületek:
Bőrgyógyászat és nemibeteg-gondozás
Farmakológia és gyógyszerészet
Szervfiziológia és kórélettan
We have recently shown that fluoxetine (FX) suppressed polyinosinic-polycytidylic
acid-induced inflammatory response and endothelin release in human epidermal keratinocytes,
via the indirect inhibition of the phosphoinositide 3-kinase (PI3K)-pathway. Because
PI3K-signaling is a positive regulator of the proliferation, in the current, highly
focused followup study, we assessed the effects of FX (14 μM) on the proliferation
and differentiation of human epidermal keratinocytes. We found that FX exerted anti-proliferative
actions in 2D cultures (HaCaT and primary human epidermal keratinocytes [NHEKs]; 48-
and 72-h; CyQUANT-assay) as well as in 3D reconstructed epidermal equivalents (48-h;
Ki-67 immunohistochemistry). Importantly, FX did not influence epidermal thickness
(hematoxylin-eosin staining), and it did not have a major impact on the differentiation-associated
alteration of the gene expression pattern (24-h treatments; RNA-Seq). Moreover, neither
keratin (K)-1, nor K10 expression was altered by FX in NHEKs (RT-qPCR) or in 3D epidermal
equivalents
(semi-quantitative immunohistomorphometry). FX did not influence differentiation-induced
up-regulation of occludin (RT-qPCR; NHEKs), and did not alter differentiation-associated
barrier forming capacity of epidermal keratinocytes (electrical impedance; Lucifer
Yellow penetration assay). Our data indicate that, besides the previously reported
combined anti-inflammatory and putative anti-pruritic effects, FX may also suppress
proliferation of human epidermal keratinocytes without impairing their differentiation
and barrier-forming capacity.