Cell-intrinsic melanin fails to protect melanocytes from ultraviolet-mutagenesis in the absence of epidermal melanin.
Tirzah J WeissEmma R CrawfordValentina PosadaHafeez RahmanTong LiuBrandon M MurphyTiffany E ArnoldShannon GrayZhexuan HuRebecca C HennesseyLianbo YuJohn August D'OrazioCraig J BurdJonathan H ZippinDouglas GrossmanChristin E BurdPublished in: Pigment cell & melanoma research (2022)
Melanin is a free-radical scavenger, antioxidant, and broadband absorber of ultraviolet (UV) radiation which protects the skin from environmental carcinogenesis. However, melanin synthesis and UV-induced reactive melanin species are also implicated in melanocyte genotoxicity. Here, we attempted to reconcile these disparate functions of melanin using a UVB-sensitive, NRAS-mutant mouse model, TpN. We crossed TpN mice heterozygous for an inactivating mutation in Tyrosinase to produce albino and black littermates on a C57BL/6J background. These animals were then exposed to a single UVB dose on postnatal day three when keratinocytes in the skin have yet to be melanized. Approximately one-third (35%) of black mice were protected from UVB-accelerated tumor formation. However, melanoma growth rates, tumor mutational burdens, and gene expression profiles were similar in melanomas from black and albino mice. Skin from albino mice contained more cyclobutane pyrimidine dimer (CPD) positive cells than black mice 1-h post-irradiation. However, this trend gradually reversed over time with CPDs becoming more prominent in black than albino melanocytes at 48 h. These results show that in the absence of epidermal pigmentation, melanocytic melanin limits the tumorigenic effects of acute UV exposure but fails to protect melanocytes from UVB-induced mutagenesis.
Keyphrases
- high fat diet induced
- wound healing
- wild type
- mouse model
- high glucose
- oxidative stress
- type diabetes
- induced apoptosis
- stem cells
- diabetic rats
- gene expression
- risk assessment
- radiation therapy
- endothelial cells
- intensive care unit
- mesenchymal stem cells
- climate change
- radiation induced
- transcription factor
- signaling pathway
- bone marrow
- human health
- acute respiratory distress syndrome
- skeletal muscle
- stress induced