Cathepsin D, but not cathepsin E, degrades desmosomes during epidermal desquamation.

Br J Dermatol

Cosmetics Laboratory, Kanebo Ltd, 5-3-28 Kotobuki-cho, Odawara, Kanagawa 250-0002, Japan.

Published: August 2004

Background: We previously reported that an ambient aspartic proteinase is crucial to desquamation of the stratum corneum at pH 5. Identification of this aspartic proteinase by using enzyme inhibitors suggested it to be cathepsin D, although we could not exclude cathepsin E.

Objectives: To determine the identity of this aspartic proteinase and its distribution within the stratum corneum.

Methods: We measured enzyme activities of cathepsin D and cathepsin E in the salt and detergent extracts from callus stratum corneum, using a fluorogenic peptide as a substrate and comparing the effect of addition of Ascaris pepsin inhibitor (specific for cathepsin E) with that of pepstatin A (which inhibits both cathepsin D and cathepsin E). Both enzymes were then extracted and purified from plantar stratum corneum samples and identified by Western blotting. Immunofluorescence microscopy was used to investigate the localization of proteinases within human plantar stratum corneum sample sections.

Results: We found that 20% of total aspartic proteinase activity could be attributed to cathepsin E, the remainder to cathepsin D. Two subunits of cathepsin D were identified, a mature active form at 33 kDa and an intermediate active form at 48 kDa; cathepsin E was also identified at 48 kDa, although in a stained band 10-fold weaker in the immunoblot. Immunofluorescence microscopy showed the antibody to cathepsin D to be localized in the lipid envelopes of the stratum corneum, whereas that to cathepsin E stained the tissue diffusely. The labelling for cathepsin D was similar to that observed for desmosomes, and immunoelectron microscopy confirmed that cathepsin D was present on desmosomes. On the other hand, cathepsin E occurred intracellularly within the squames.

Conclusions: We conclude that cathepsin D, and not cathepsin E, causes desquamation by degrading desmosomes.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2133.2004.06061.xDOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

stratum corneum
20
cathepsin
19
cathepsin cathepsin
16
aspartic proteinase
16
plantar stratum
8
immunofluorescence microscopy
8
cathepsin identified
8
active form
8
form kda
8
stratum
6

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!