Dermal elastic fibers are believed to have a primary role in providing elastic stretch and recoil to the skin. Here we compare the structural arrangement of dermal elastic fibers of chick skin and different animal species. Most elastic fibers in chick skin are derived from cells that line the feather follicle and/or smooth muscle that connects the pterial and apterial muscle bundles to feather follicles. Elastic fibers in the dermis of animals with single, primary hair follicles are derived from cells lining the hair follicle or from the ends of the pili muscle, which anchors the muscle to the matrix or to the hair follicle. Each follicle is interconnected with elastic fibers. Follicles of animals with primary and secondary (wool) hair follicles are also interconnected by elastic fibers, yet only the elastic fibers derived from the primary follicle are connected to each primary follicle. Only the primary hair follicles are connected to the pili muscle. Human skin, but not the skin of other primates, is significantly different from other animals with respect to elastic fiber organization and probably cell of origin. The data suggest that the primary role for elastic fibers in animals, with the possible exception of humans, is movement and/or placement of feathers or hair.
SPARC (Secreted Protein Acidic and Rich in Cysteine) is a multifunctional glycoprotein belonging to a group of matrix-associated factors that mediate cell-extracellular matrix interactions but have no structural roles. In the present study we investigated the contribution of SPARC to factors that influence the development of skin tumors in response to UV irradiation. A hairless SPARC-null mouse was developed and compared to control SKH1 hairless mice in terms of skin tumor induction and extracellular matrix changes occurring in response to UV-irradiation. Following 23 weeks of exposure to UVB totaling 14.5 J per cm(2), tumor development in the wild-type mice was severe, with an average of over 20 tumors per mouse, many of which were squamous cell carcinomas. Conversely, the SPARC-null mice were strikingly tumor-resistant, developing no squamous cell carcinomas and averaging less than one small papilloma per mouse. SPARC was undetectable immunohistochemically in skin from the non-irradiated control group yet was present in relatively high quantities in the basal and superficial areas of the tumor mass. The SPARC-null mice also exhibited a limited contact hypersensitivity response and were refractory to UV induced immune suppression. In conclusion, SPARC appears to have a crucial role in mediating tumor formation in response to UV irradiation.
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