Isolation and Characterization of Sweat Gland Myoepithelial Cells from Human Skin

Stem cells routinely maintain the main epidermal components, i.e. the interfollicular epidermis, hair follicles, and sweat glands. Human sweat glands present throughout the body are glandular exocrine organs that mainly play a role in thermoregulation by sweating. Emerging evidence points to the pre...

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Veröffentlicht in:Cell Structure and Function 2014, Vol.39(2), pp.101-112
Hauptverfasser: Kurata, Ryuichiro, Futaki, Sugiko, Nakano, Itsuko, Tanemura, Atsushi, Murota, Hiroyuki, Katayama, Ichiro, Sekiguchi, Kiyotoshi
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Stem cells routinely maintain the main epidermal components, i.e. the interfollicular epidermis, hair follicles, and sweat glands. Human sweat glands present throughout the body are glandular exocrine organs that mainly play a role in thermoregulation by sweating. Emerging evidence points to the presence of stem cells in sweat glands, but it remains unclear whether such stem cells exist in human sweat glands. Here, we attempted to gather evidence for stem cells in human sweat glands, which would be characterized by self-renewal ability and multipotency. First, we explored human sweat gland cells for expression of stem cell markers. CD29 and Notch, epidermal stem cell markers, were found to reside among α-smooth muscle actin-positive myoepithelial cells in human sweat glands. Next, sweat gland myoepithelial cells were isolated from human skin as a CD29hiCD49f hi subpopulation. The myoepithelial cell-enriched CD29hiCD49f hi subpopulation possessed the ability to differentiate into sweat gland luminal cells in sphere-forming assays. Furthermore, CD29hiCD49f hi subpopulation-derived sphere-forming cells exhibited long-term proliferative potential upon multiple passaging, indicating that the CD29hiCD49f hi myoepithelial subpopulation includes stem cells with self-renewal ability. These findings provide evidence that human sweat gland myoepithelial cells contain stem cells that possess both self-renewal ability and multipotency to differentiate into sweat glands.
ISSN:0386-7196
1347-3700
DOI:10.1247/csf.14009