A Stress Response Program at the Origin of Evolutionary Innovation in the Skin

L. Eckhart, F. Ehrlich, E. Tschachler
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引用次数: 8

Abstract

The skin epithelium, ie, the epidermis, of dolphins and whales (cetaceans) is up to 50 times thicker than that of humans and other mammals living on land. Recently, comparative genomics revealed further striking differences in the cytoskeleton of the outer layers of the epidermis in aquatic and terrestrial mammals. Cetaceans lack the cytoskeletal keratins, which make up more than half of the total protein mass in the cornified epidermal layer of terrestrial mammals under homeostatic conditions. By contrast, orthologs of stress-inducible epithelial keratins are conserved in cetaceans and these keratins are constitutively expressed in their skin. Thus, the epidermal stress response program of a terrestrial common ancestor of modern mammals has become the default program of epidermal differentiation and a central component of the unique cutaneous organization of cetaceans. We propose that phenotypic plasticity during stress responses plays important roles in the evolution of the skin.
应激反应程序在皮肤进化创新的起源
海豚和鲸鱼(鲸目动物)的皮肤上皮,即表皮,比人类和其他生活在陆地上的哺乳动物厚50倍。最近,比较基因组学进一步揭示了水生和陆生哺乳动物表皮外层细胞骨架的显著差异。鲸目动物缺乏细胞骨架角蛋白,而在稳态条件下,角蛋白占陆生哺乳动物角化表皮层总蛋白质量的一半以上。相比之下,应激诱导的上皮角蛋白的同源物在鲸类动物中是保守的,这些角蛋白在它们的皮肤中组成性表达。因此,现代哺乳动物陆生共同祖先的表皮应激反应程序已经成为表皮分化的默认程序和鲸类独特皮肤组织的核心组成部分。我们认为应激反应中的表型可塑性在皮肤的进化中起着重要的作用。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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