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New insights into the structural role of EMILINs within the human skin microenvironment. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Supramolecular ECM networks, crucial for skin structure and function, include EMILIN proteins that interact with elastin and influence cellular signaling.
  • Our study mapped the distribution of EMILIN-1, -2, and -3 in human skin, revealing their role in elastic fibers and their connections with basal keratinocytes.
  • We found that in conditions like Marfan syndrome and scleroderma, the presence and localization of EMILINs change, indicating they can be used as markers for monitoring dermal ECM rearrangements due to aging and disease.

Article Abstract

Supramolecular extracellular matrix (ECM) networks play an essential role in skin architecture and function. Elastin microfibril interface-located proteins (EMILINs) comprise a family of three extracellular glycoproteins that serve as essential structural components of the elastin/fibrillin microfibril network, and exert crucial functions in cellular signaling. Little is known about the structural nature of EMILIN networks in skin. We therefore investigated the spatiotemporal localization of EMILIN-1, -2, -3 in human skin induced by aging, UV-exposure, fibrosis, and connective tissue disorder. Confocal immunofluorescence and immunogold electron microscopy analysis identified all EMILINs as components of elastic fibers and elastin-free oxytalan fibers inserted into the basement membrane (BM). Further, our ultrastructural analysis demonstrates cellular contacts of dermally localized EMILIN-1 positive fibers across the BM with the surface of basal keratinocytes. Analysis of skin biopsies and fibroblast cultures from fibrillin-1 deficient Marfan patients revealed that EMILINs require intact fibrillin-1 as deposition scaffold. In patients with scleroderma and the bleomycin-induced murine fibrosis model EMILIN-2 was upregulated. EMILIN-3 localizes to the tips of candelabra-like oxytalan fibers, and to specialized BMs engulfing hair follicles and sebaceous glands. Our data identify EMILINs as important markers to monitor rearrangements of the dermal ECM architecture induced by aging and pathological conditions.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11621341PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41598-024-81509-5DOI Listing

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