APA
Peña Jimenez, Daniel & Fontenete, Silvia & Megias, Diego & Fustero Torre, Coral & Graña Castro, Osvaldo & Castellana, Donatello & Loewe, Robert & Perez Moreno, Mirna (2019 ) .Lymphatic vessels interact dynamically with the hair follicle stem cell niche during skin regeneration in vivo.
ISO 690
Peña Jimenez, Daniel & Fontenete, Silvia & Megias, Diego & Fustero Torre, Coral & Graña Castro, Osvaldo & Castellana, Donatello & Loewe, Robert & Perez Moreno, Mirna. 2019 .Lymphatic vessels interact dynamically with the hair follicle stem cell niche during skin regeneration in vivo.
https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12080/39620
Abstract:
Lymphatic vessels are essential for skin fluid homeostasis and
immune cell trafficking. Whether the lymphatic vasculature is
associated with hair follicle regeneration is, however, unknown.
Here, using steady and live imaging approaches in mouse skin,
we show that lymphatic vessels distribute to the anterior
permanent region of individual hair follicles, starting from
development through all cycle stages and interconnecting
neighboring follicles at the bulge level, in a stem cell-depen dent manner. Lymphatic vessels further connect hair follicles in
triads and dynamically flow across the skin. At the onset of
the physiological stem cell activation, or upon pharmacological
or genetic induction of hair follicle growth, lymphatic vessels
transiently expand their caliber suggesting an increased tissue
drainage capacity. Interestingly, the physiological caliber
increase is associated with a distinct gene expression correlated
with lymphatic vessel reorganization. Using mouse genetics, we
show that lymphatic vessel depletion blocks hair follicle growth.
Our findings point toward the lymphatic vasculature being
important for hair follicle development, cycling, and organiza tion, and define lymphatic vessels as stem cell niche compo nents, coordinating connections at tissue-level, thus provide
insight into their functional contribution to skin regeneration.