| April
14, 2005
Master Gene Controls Healing Of “Skin”
In Fruit Flies And Mammals
By Sherry Seethaler
University of
California, San Diego biologists and their colleagues have discovered
that the genetic system controlling the development and repair
of insect cuticle—the outer layer of the body surface
in insects—also controls these processes in mammalian
skin, a finding that could lead to new insights into the healing
of wounds and treatment of cancer.
The UCSD biologists’
study, published April 15 in the journal Science identifies
a master gene called grainyhead that activates wound
repair genes in the cells surrounding an injury in the cuticle
of a fly embryo. These wound repair genes then regenerate the
injured patch of cuticle.
In a separate study
published in the same issue of Science, a team of researchers
led by Stephen Jane at the Royal Melbourne Hospital in Melbourne,
Australia report that, although insect cuticle and the outer
layer of mammal skin are very different chemically, the grainyhead
gene is also essential for normal skin development and wound
repair in mice.
|
Image
shows activation of cuticle repair genes (green) surrounding
wound (center) in a fruit fly larva (red)
Credit: Kimberly Mace, UCSF |
“The discovery
that grainyhead-like factors are required for the response
to injury opens up new avenues of research in the field of wound
healing,” said Kimberly Mace, the first author of the
UCSD paper. “It also opens new avenues for cancer research,
since many cancer cells activate genes normally involved in
wound healing in order to kick start processes such as cell
division and cell migration.”
Mace, a former graduate
student of biology professor William McGinnis, who led the UCSD
team, became interested in the healing of insect cuticle when
she noticed lesions in the cuticle of certain fruit fly mutants.
She suspected that the lesions were scar tissue resulting from
the failure of the body surface barrier to develop properly.
Confirming her suspicions, the mutant embryos turned out to
be much more permeable to a dye than normal embryos.
The group also showed
that the genes active in the mutant flies’ lesions were
activated in normal flies in cells surrounding a wound created
with a sterile needle. The researchers then worked backward,
using bioinformatics—computational analysis of DNA sequences—to
identify grainyhead as the master gene that initiates
the genetic chain reaction that results in cuticle repair. Wounds
in mutant flies that lack the grainyhead gene fail
to heal.
“The genes involved
in cuticle repair are activated very quickly, within 30 minutes
after injury,” said Joseph Pearson, a graduate student
working under McGinnis and a coauthor of the paper. “They
are activated over many cell diameters, most strongly at the
boundaries of the wound, suggesting that the grainyhead
gene initiates the cuticle repair response after it receives
an as-of-yet unidentified signal produced in cells adjacent
to the injury.”
In its study, Jane’s
team found that, like their fruit fly counterparts, mice lacking
grainyhead have a much more permeable skin than normal
mice and have deficient wound repair. Both groups point out
in their papers that it is interesting that the regulatory mechanisms
for development and repair of the surface barrier in insects
and mammals have been conserved, given the differences in the
molecular composition of insect cuticle and mammal skin.
“The proteins
that link together to form the insect cuticle and stratum corneum—the
outer layer of mammal skin—are completely different,”
says McGinnis. “So it is remarkable that flies and mammals
share an ancient conserved pathway to construct and repair the
body envelope that protects them from sharp edges and microbes,
even though that body envelope is constructed of mostly different
molecules.”
In their paper, the
UCSD researchers state that studying the wound response pathway
in fruit flies, which are easy to manipulate genetically, may
provide new insight into wound healing in mammals. For example,
Mace points out that very little is known how wound tissue stops
its growth behavior when the wound is healed. In addition, cancer
cells evade this "stop" program, but how they do it
is not well understood.
The study was supported
by grants from the National Institutes of Health.
Media Contact: Sherry
Seethaler (858) 534-4656
Comment: William McGinnis
(858) 822-0458
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