| April
7, 2004
UCSD Researchers Determine New
Role For IKK
In Embryonic Development Of Skull & Skeleton
By Sue Pondrom
Continuing studies
about an important regulatory protein kinase complex called
I-kappa-B kinase (or IKK) have now shown that a subunit of IKK
– IKK alpha – influences the outer layer of skin
in developing mice to control the eventual shape of the full-grown
skeleton and skull.
University of California,
San Diego (UCSD) School of Medicine researcher Michael Karin,
Ph.D., first discovered the IKK complex and its three sub-units,
alpha, beta and gamma in 1996. Since then, his group has published
extensively on the numerous activities of IKK sub-units, including
roles in immune response activation, in formation of the skin’s
outer layer, and as an essential protein that prevents a rare
disease called Incontinentia Pigmenti.*
Published in the April
8, 2004 issue of the journal Nature**, the new study
illustrates how IKK alpha, acting within the ectoderm, or outer
layer of developing skin, relays developmental information to
the mesoderm, the middle layer of the developing embryo, which
gives rise to the skull, skeleton and musculature.
Scientists already
know that mesoderm cells, within the first few hours of development,
migrate to the location of skeleton and head where they form
a mesh into which bone can be laid. However, this is the first
study to graphically illustrate the role of the ectoderm in
this process.
The researchers found
that one mechanism by which IKK alpha exerts a strong effect
on development of cranial and skeletal bone is through regulation
of a family of growth factors called fibroblast growth factors
(FGF).
“By understanding
the processes that control development, we have a new path to
pursue for potential treatment of mutations affecting skeletal
and craniofacial development in humans,” said Karin, who
is a UCSD professor of pharmacology and an American Cancer Society
Research Professor.
“It may also
turn out that controlling FGF over-expression by IKK alpha could
be relevant for certain types of skin cancer,” Karin added.
“Although cancer usually appears as we grow older, some
of the aberrations that lead to cancer development may have
occurred early in life during embryogenesis. In this case, overproduction
of FGFs, proteins that stimulate the proliferation of skin cells,
may make an important contribution to the eventual development
of certain types of skin cancer.”
For their experiments,
the investigators utilized IKK alpha-deficient mice who are
born with abnormalities that included taut and shiny skin, rudimentary
limbs, absent or severely truncated tail, and a short and rounded
head due to shorter jaw and nasal bones.
When embryos of IKK
alpha-deficient mice were given a version of IKK alpha that
deposits itself exclusively in the outer layer of the skin,
the newborn mice were normal, with wrinkled and loose skin,
well-developed limbs and tails, and a fully normal head.
While these results
indicated that IKK alpha in the ectoderm was required for mesodermally
derived skeletal development, the researchers noted that it
raised the question of how the outer layer of skin exerts its
control.
Hypothesizing that
a possible mechanism may include increased or decreased production
of certain proteins known to be involved in shaping the skeleton
and skull, the team studied two specific proteins – FGFs
and bone morphogenic proteins (BMPs). Using a method called
polymerase chain reaction, they looked at tissue samples from
normal and IKK alpha-deficient mice. The most striking alterations
were highly elevated levels of FGF proteins in the IKK alpha-deficient
mice. When the IKK alpha-deficient embryonic mice were given
ectodermal IKK alpha, however, the FGF over-expression was reversed.
Karin noted that IKK
alpha appears to regulate FGF through its ability to induce
the differentiation (change to a more specialized form) of keratinocytes,
which are skin cells that make the tough, insoluble protein
substance called keratin that is the chief constituent of hair,
nails, horns and hooves.
The study was supported
by grants from the National Institutes of Health, and Superfund
Basic Research Program and CERIES research awards.
In addition to Karin,
the study investigators were first author Alok K. Sil, Ph.D.,
Laboratory of Gene Regulation and Signal Transduction, Department
of Pharmacology, UCSD; and Shin Madda, M.D., Ph.D., and Yuji
Sano, Ph.D., also members of the Laboratory of Gene Regulation
and Signal Transduction, Department of Pharmacology, UCSD; and
Dennis R. Roop, Ph.D., Departments of Molecular and Cellular
Biology and Dermatology, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston,
Texas.
** “IkB kinase-alpha
acts in the epidermis to control skeletal and craniofacial morphogenesis,”
Nature, April 8, 2004.
Media Contact: Sue
Pondrom (619) 543-6163
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