Frog melanophores rapidly change colour by dispersion or aggregation of melanosomes. A long-term colour change exists where melanosomes are released from melanophores and transferred to surrounding skin cells. No in vitro model for pigment transfer exists for lower vertebrates. Frog melanophores of different morphology exist both in epidermis where keratinocytes are present and in dermis where fibroblasts dominate. We have examined whether release and transfer of melanosomes can be studied in a melanophore-fibroblast co-culture, as no frog keratinocyte cell line exists. Xenopus laevis melanophores are normally cultured in conditioned medium from fibroblasts and fibroblast-derived factors may be important for melanophore morphology. Melanin was exocytosed as membrane-enclosed melanosomes in a process that was upregulated by alpha-melanocyte-stimulating hormone (alpha-MSH), and melanosomes where taken up by fibroblasts. Melanosome membrane-proteins seemed to be of importance, as the cluster-like uptake pattern of pigment granules was distinct from that of latex beads. In vivo results confirmed the ability of dermal fibroblasts to engulf melanosomes. Our results show that cultured frog melanophores can not only be used for studies of rapid colour change, but also as a model system for long-term colour changes and for studies of factors that affect pigmentation.
Black pigment cells, melanophores, from lower vertebrates are specialized in bidirectional and coordinated translocation of pigment granules, melanosomes, in the cytoplasm. Melanophores develop from the neuronal crest and are most abundant in the dermal and epidermal layers of the skin, where the intracellular distribution of the pigment significantly influences the color of the animal. The transport of pigment is dependent on an intact cytoskeleton and motor proteins associated with cytoskeletal components. The easily cultured melanophores have proved to be excellent models for organelle transport because the intracellular movements of pigment can be visualized via light microscopy, and the granules move in response to defined chemical signals. The ease of achieving a combination of morphological and functional transport studies is the advantage of the melanophore system, and studies on pigment cells have revealed new components of the transport machinery, including molecular motors, their adapters, and transfer of vesicles to other cells. Many cellular components are transported with a combination of the actin- and microtubule-based transport systems, and, since all eukaryotic organisms rely on functional intracellular transport and an intact cytoskeleton, studies on melanophores are important for many aspects of cell biology, including axonal transport. In this review, we present an overview of the research on the pigment transport system and the potential use of pigment cells as a model system.
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