Increased expression of 14-3-3varepsilon protein in intrinsically aged and photoaged human skin in vivo

Skin aging is a complicated process associated with the passage of time and environmental exposure, especially to UV light. This aging phenomenon is related to alterations in various cellular mechanisms, such as changes in apoptosis, perturbations to cellular signaling, and an increased genetic inst...

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Veröffentlicht in:Mechanisms of ageing and development 2005-06, Vol.126 (6-7), p.629-636
Hauptverfasser: Choi, Kyung-Chul, Lee, Serah, Kwak, Sun Young, Kim, Mi-Sun, Choi, Hyo Kyoung, Kim, Kyu Han, Chung, Jin Ho, Park, Seok Hee
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container_end_page 636
container_issue 6-7
container_start_page 629
container_title Mechanisms of ageing and development
container_volume 126
creator Choi, Kyung-Chul
Lee, Serah
Kwak, Sun Young
Kim, Mi-Sun
Choi, Hyo Kyoung
Kim, Kyu Han
Chung, Jin Ho
Park, Seok Hee
description Skin aging is a complicated process associated with the passage of time and environmental exposure, especially to UV light. This aging phenomenon is related to alterations in various cellular mechanisms, such as changes in apoptosis, perturbations to cellular signaling, and an increased genetic instability. In this study, we investigated changes of proteins involved in intrinsic aging by the proteomic analysis of human sun-protected (upper inner arm) young and aged dermis. One of the proteins upregulated in aged dermis was identified as 14-3-3epsilon. This protein is an isoform of 14-3-3 protein, which is involved in cellular processes like signal transduction, cell cycle arrest, and apoptosis. 14-3-3epsilon is consistently found to be upregulated in the sun-protected dermis of aged skin, by Western blotting and immunohistochemical staining. In addition, we demonstrate that the expression of 14-3-3epsilon is further upregulated in the sun-exposed (photodamaged) dermis, and that the UV irradiation of young skin significantly upregulates 14-3-3epsilon in vivo. Our results suggest the possibility that the cellular processes related to 14-3-3epsilon protein play an important role in the photoaging and intrinsic aging of human skin.
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subjects 14-3-3 Proteins - biosynthesis
Adolescent
Adult
Aged
Dermis - metabolism
Dermis - pathology
Female
Humans
Male
Middle Aged
Skin Aging - pathology
Skin Aging - physiology
Skin Aging - radiation effects
Ultraviolet Rays - adverse effects
title Increased expression of 14-3-3varepsilon protein in intrinsically aged and photoaged human skin in vivo
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