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Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine (A.S., A.P.), University of Tennessee, Memphis, Tennessee 38163; Department of Biophysics (P.M.P.), Faculty of Biotechnology, Jagiellonian University, 30-387 Krakow, Poland; Vollum Institute (J.L.S., V.T., M.J.L.), Department of Behavioral Neuroscience (M.J.L.), and Center for the Study of Weight Regulation and Associated Disorders (M.J.L.), Oregon Health and Science University, Portland, Oregon 97239; and Department of Medicine (J.W.), Southern Illinois University, Springfield, Illinois 62704
Address all correspondence and requests for reprints to: Malcolm J. Low, M.D., Ph.D., Vollum Institute, L-474, Oregon Health and Science University, 3181 SW Sam Jackson Park Road, Portland, Oregon 97239-3098. E-mail: low{at}ohsu.edu.
| Abstract |
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MSH, from the Pomc gene. Although these Pomc/ mice exhibited adrenal hypoplasia and obesity similar to the syndrome of POMC deficiency in children, their agouti coat color was only subtly altered. To further investigate the mechanism of hair pigmentation in the absence of POMC peptides, we studied wild-type (Pomc+/+), heterozygous (Pomc+/), and homozygous (Pomc/) mice on a nonagouti (a/a) 129;B6 hybrid genetic background. All three genotypes had similar black fur pigmentation with yellow hairs behind the ears, around the nipples, and in the perianal area characteristic of inbred C57BL/6 mice. Histologic and electron paramagnetic resonance spectrometry examination demonstrated that hair follicles in back skin of Pomc/ mice developed with normal structure and eumelanin pigmentation; corresponding molecular analyses, however, excluded local production of
MSH and ACTH because neither Pomc nor putative Pomc pseudogene mRNAs were detected in the skin. Thus, 129;B6 Pomc null mutant mice produce abundant eumelanin hair pigmentation despite their congenital absence of melanocortin ligands. These results suggest that either the mouse melanocortin receptor 1 has sufficient basal activity to trigger and sustain eumelanogenesis in vivo or that redundant nonmelanocortin pathway(s) compensate for the melanocortin deficiency. Whereas the latter implies feedback control of melanogenesis, it is also possible that the two mechanisms operate jointly in hair follicles. | Introduction |
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Although tyrosinase activity is the rate-limiting step among the melanogenesis-related enzymes (1, 7, 8), pigmentation is under complex genetic control regulated by more than 150 alleles representing more than 90 gene loci (3, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14). Protein products of these loci include enzymes, structural proteins, transcriptional regulators, transporters, receptors, and growth factors with a wide array of functions and cellular targets (3, 13). Among them are the important structural, enzymatic and regulatory proteins coded by albino(c)/TYR, brown(b)/TYRP1, slaty(slt)/TYRP2/DCT, silver(slt)/SILV, pink-eyed dilute(p)/P/OCA2, underwhite(uw)/LOC51151, MART1, OA1 loci, melanocortin receptor type 1 (MC1-R), proopiomelanocortin (POMC), and agouti (AGP) (3, 13).
The melanogenic effects of POMC-derived MSH and ACTH peptides have been documented in a number of vertebrate species (3, 13, 15, 16). Thus, in amphibians
- and ßMSH induce darkening of the skin (reviewed in Ref. 16), whereas in mammalian systems such as rodents, MSH peptides stimulate both melanogenesis and the switch from pheo- (yellow/red) to eumelanogenic (black) pathways (13, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22). In humans the systemic administration of
MSH, ßMSH, or ACTH stimulates skin pigmentation, predominantly in sun-exposed areas, whereas pathologically increased plasma ACTH levels (Addisons disease or Nelsons syndrome) induce hyperpigmentation and skin atrophy (15). Conversely, patients with POMC gene mutations leading to defective production of the POMC prohormone in all tissues show a red hair phenotype in addition to early-onset obesity and adrenal insufficiency (23). Recessive mutations in the MC1-R that produce unresponsiveness of epidermal melanocytes to
MSH also result in the red hair phenotype (13, 24) in humans or yellow fur in mice, whereas a dominant allele produces a constitutively active MC1-R that results in uniform jet black fur in somber mice (25).
Agouti coloration in wild-type mice is characterized by a banded pigmentation pattern of the pelage, in which each hair is black with a subapical band of yellow. AGP (the product of agouti locus A) is produced in dermal papilla cells and acts within the microenvironment of the hair follicle during hair growth to transiently switch eumelanin synthesis into pheomelanin synthesis, thereby generating the agouti coat color (12, 26, 27, 28). Several studies have demonstrated that AGP can function as a competitive antagonist of the MC1-R, blocking its activation by
MSH (3, 13, 26) or as an inverse agonist (29, 30). AGP therefore suppresses melanogenesis by decreasing tyrosinase activity, decreasing expression of melanogenic genes including those that encode tyrosinase and tyrosinase-related protein 1 and 2 and inhibiting translation of MC1-R (3, 13, 31).
Melanocortin and ACTH sequences are encoded within exon 3 of the Pomc gene (32), which in addition to the pituitary, is transcribed, translated, and processed in the central nervous system (33) and a variety of peripheral tissues including skin (15). Concordantly, two distinct strains of Pomc-null mice generated independently on either a hybrid 129X1;129S6 genetic background (34) or a 129S6;129S2 genetic background (35) exhibit a syndrome of adrenal insufficiency, obesity, and a subtle alteration in coat color distinguished by a lighter yellow tint to agouti-banded hairs that is most pronounced on their bellies. However, when the null Pomc allele was backcrossed from the 129X1;129S6 white-bellied agouti genetic background (Aw/Aw) onto the C57BL/6J nonagouti (a/a), genetic background for two generations the Pomc/ offspring exhibited black fur pigmentation visually indistinguishable from sibling controls expressing the wild-type Pomc allele (36). This persistence of black pigmentation contrasts with the red hair phenotype of human POMC deficiency (23). It is also at variance with our own observations in the C57BL/6 mouse strain of anagen coupling to melanogenesis and enhanced cutaneous expression of the Pomc and Mc1r genes (15, 37, 38). Therefore, we performed detailed histological studies of skin and hair follicle structure with biophysical analyses of the pigment type produced in Pomc/ mice. The results were then correlated with molecular analyses of local POMC expression.
| Materials and Methods |
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Tissue processing
Murine tissue samples consisted of skin isolated at telogen and anagen (d 5 to 7 post depilation) stages of the hair cycle. The animals (9 month old male mice) were euthanized under 2% Avertin (2,2,2-tribromoethanol) anesthesia, and back skin was collected following protocols routinely used in our laboratory. Tissue specimens were either frozen rapidly in liquid nitrogen and stored at 80 C until further analysis or fixed in 10% buffered formalin, paraffin embedded, and stained with hematoxylin and eosin (38).
Preparation of samples for electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) assay
Fur was obtained from the back of anesthetized adult mice using an electric clipper, collected into individual preweighed polypropylene tubes, and stored dry at room temperature until analysis. We compared fur of test mice (either Pomc/ or Pomc+/+) with fur of standard black C57BL/6J mice containing eumelanin and with samples of yellow fur containing pheomelanin, i.e. C57BL/6J AY/a mice (39, 40), and the yellow form of Mongolian gerbil (Meriones unguiculatus) (41). We also compared the EPR signals of fur with the signals of synthetic melanins.
Dopa-melanin, the synthetic counterpart of eumelanin, was synthesized by dopa autooxidation (42). The aqueous solution of D,L-dopa was bubbled with air for 4 d at ambient temperature, whereas the pH was kept constant at 8.0 (NH4OH). The synthetic equivalent for a natural pheomelanin was prepared by enzymatic oxidation of L-DOPA and L-cysteine (according to Ref. 43). The solution of 994 mg L-DOPA and a double excess of L-cysteine (448 mg) in 500 ml Sorensens buffer [Na2HPO4/KH2PO4, 0.01 M (pH 6.8)] was supplemented with 200,000 U of yeast tyrosinase in 25 ml of the same buffer, stirred for 1 h, and bubbled for 4 d with air. Both melanins were then precipitated from solution by lowering the pH to 3.03.5 with concentrated HCl, purified with several washings with redistilled water, and dialyzed against redistilled water for 4 d. The substances were then dried for 4 d in the air at 37 C and introduced into glass capillaries that were sealed by melting and solidifying their ends. Every sample contained 8.2 ± 0.1 mg of dry powdered melanin. All the reagents were obtained from Sigma Chemical Co. (St. Louis, MO).
EPR spectrometry
All the measurements were carried out at room temperature using a Varian 103 EPR X-band spectrometer (Varian, Inc., Palo Alto, CA) with 100 kHz modulation frequency and a rectangular TE 102 resonant cavity. Samples of fur (20 ± 1 mg) and capillaries with melanins were put into a quartz finger Dewar and then always placed in the cavity in the same position against the modulation field. Parameters of measurements were as follows: magnetic field 3265 ± 50 Gs; modulation amplitude 5 Gs for quantitative comparisons; 2 Gs to record the signal shape; and 0.5 Gs to measure the signal peak-to-peak width, microwave frequency 9.17 GHz, and power 1 mW. Spectra were acquired in a digital form (1024 points per scan) at 0.1 or 0.3 time constant, 90180 time scan, 17 times (averaged), at instrumental gain 12,500 to1 million according to the particular signal to noise ratio. All the signal intensities were expressed as integral intensities (by double integration of signal curves), whereupon means ± SEM of at least five independent samples were calculated to prepare bar plots. The quantitative data were additionally recalculated for a constant gain (12,500) and constant sample mass (20 mg). All the conclusions drawn from the comparisons of the integral intensities were additionally confirmed by comparing peak-to-peak amplitudes of the signals. A small powder sample of 1,1-diphenyl-2-picrylhydrazyl (DPPH) served as a marker for the position of the free radical signal (g = 2.0037). The statistical significance of the differences in signal intensities and widths were tested by the independent two-tailed Student t test and accepted for P < 0.05.
cDNA preparation
Total RNA was extracted using a Trizol isolation kit (Life Technologies, Inc.-BRL, Gaithersburg, MD), whereas poly (A+) mRNA was isolated using Oligotex mRNA minikit (Qiagen, Valencia, CA). RNA samples were treated with DNase before reverse transcription (RT), and only those samples that were negative for glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (GAPDH) genomic sequences by PCR amplification were used for RT (44). The synthesis of first-strand cDNA was performed using the Superscript preamplification system (Invitrogen, Carlsbad, CA). An aliquot of 5 µg total RNA or 0.1 µg mRNA per reaction was reverse transcribed using oligo(dT) as the primer. The expression of genes having only one coding exon was evaluated using cDNA synthesized from DNase-treated RNA. Lack of DNA contamination was confirmed by negative amplification of RNA without prior RT.
PCRs
All primers were synthesized by Integrated DNA Technology Inc. (Coralville, IA). All samples were standardized by the amplification of the housekeeping gene GAPDH as described previously (44).
Detection of mouse Pomc and Pomc-ps1 pseudogene was obtained by direct or nested PCR amplifications of the corresponding cDNAs. Sequences of the primers used for PCR amplifications are listed in Table 1
, whereas their exon location together with gene structure is presented in Fig. 1
. The reaction mixture (25 µl) contained 3.0 mM MgCl2, 0.25 mM of each deoxynucleotide triphosphate, 0.4 µM of each primer, 75 mM Tris-HCl (pH 8.8), 20 mM (NH4)2SO4, 0.01% Tween 20, and 1.25 U of Taq polymerase (Promega, Madison, WI). The mixture was heated to 95 C for 3 min and then amplified for 35 cycles as specified: 94 C for 30 sec (denaturation), 55 C for 30 sec (annealing), and 72 C for 40 sec (extension). Amplification products were separated by agarose gel electrophoresis and visualized by ethidium bromide staining according to standard protocols used in our laboratory (44). For nested PCR the mixtures were amplified for 25 cycles as described above during the first round of amplification. Five microliters were used for a second cycle of amplification using primers described in Table 1
and the program described above.
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| Results |
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All N1 heterozygous 129;B6 (Pomc+/ Aw/a+/?) mice had fur pigmentation characteristic for expression of the dominant Aw and wild-type Tyrosinase alleles: dark agouti hairs on the back and lighter white/yellow hairs on the belly. In contrast, one fourth of the N2 heterozygous Pomc mice had black fur consistent with a (Pomc+/ a/a+/?) genotype and the remaining three fourths all had coat coloring identical with the agouti N1 generation mice. Intercrossing of black N2 heterozygous Pomc mice yielded offspring with each of the three possible Pomc genotypes, all of which had indistinguishable black fur pigmentation with scattered yellow hairs behind the ears on the ventral surface of the neck, around the nipples, and in the perianal area (Fig. 2
, AH). No mice with pink eyes and chinchilla or albino fur have been found of a total population of more than 500 born to multiple N2 heterozygous Pomc breeder pairs, indicating with virtual certainty that the recessive pTyrc-ch and pTyrc alleles were eliminated from our breeding colony by segregation at an earlier generation and therefore that all the mice studied must be homozygous for the wild-type Tyrosinase allele. The same phenotype of uniformly black fur was observed after synchronous anagen induction by hair depilation in Pomc+/+ and Pomc/ mice (Fig. 2
, I and J).
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To test for the possibility of residual local production of
MSH and ACTH in the Pomc/ mice, we performed molecular analyses for Pomc gene expression in back skin (Fig. 6
). Neither direct nor nested RT-PCR with primers at exons 2 vs. 3 or solely at exon 3 could detect POMC mRNA in back skin from 129;B6 Pomc/ mice (Fig. 6
). Predictably, POMC mRNA was detected in the skin of sibling control 129;B6 Pomc+/+ and Pomc+/ mice. Sequencing of the PCR-amplified DNA products from the latter mice confirmed their identity as transcripts from the Pomc gene (data not shown). As a further control, POMC mRNA was also detected in the skin of mice generated by crossing a 10-kb Pomc transgene containing 2 kb of promoter sequences and the intact transcriptional unit (Smart, J. L., V. S. Tolle, and M. J. Low, manuscript in preparation) onto the Pomc/ background. The 10-kb transgene contains regulatory elements that rescue transcription of Pomc to skin structures as well as pituitary cells of the compound mutant mice. Lastly, we also tested possible transcription of the Pomc-ps1 pseudogene using RT-PCR with the expected negative results (Fig. 7
).
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| Discussion |
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MSH or ACTH ligands.
These findings are significant because
MSH and ACTH are recognized as major regulators of melanin pigmentation in rodents and humans (13, 15, 16). Melanocortin peptide effects are mediated through a signal cascade that includes ligand interactions with the stimulatory G protein-coupled MC1-R, activation of cAMP-dependent pathways, and stimulation or induction of eumelanogenesis (13, 15, 49). The eumelanogenic pathway is counteracted by AGP, both a functional antagonist of melanocortins and an inverse agonist at MC1-R, which inhibits expression and activity of melanogenesis-related proteins, melanogenic enzymes, and MC1-R, thereby inducing the switch from eu- to pheomelanogenesis (3, 26, 27, 31). It is important to note that the switch between pheo- to eumelanogenesis in normal agouti fur is of a discontinuous on or off character-pheomelanin usually produced in low amounts at low levels of tyrosinase activity, whereas pure eumelanin is generated over a threshold value of tyrosinase activity (50). Eumelanosomes also differ in structure and shape from pheomelanosomes (1, 3, 51). It is therefore highly unlikely that low amounts of pheomelanin in the absence of AGP expression are generated in parallel to the ongoing eumelanogenesis in the same melanosome and at the same time. If the quality of melanogenesis was changed due to the deletion of POMC in our model, it should have resulted in a drastic reduction of the total amount of pigment, such that the presence of the EPR signal features attributed to pheomelanin would be detectable. In fact, the absence of POMC did not result in a qualitative change of melanogenesis, compared with the parental C57BL/6J mice as measured by EPR spectroscopy and morphologic and histological examinations.
It is probable that the eumelanogenic phenotype in the 129;B6 Pomc/ mice is due to a relatively high basal (i.e. ligand-independent) activity of MC1-R based on the following considerations: 1) MC1-R can be stimulated to couple to G proteins and stimulate the production of intracellular cAMP independently from its peptide agonists, i.e. by metal ions (52); 2) basal activity of MC1-R increases directly with greater receptor number (in malignant melanocytes) (53); 3) MC1-R expression is hair cycle dependent with the highest expression levels at anagen V-VI (when the melanogenic activity reaches its peak) and lowest at telogen (resting phase) (37); 4) MC1-R variants strongly correlate with the type and degree of melanin production throughout the animal kingdom (54); and 5) AGP (an intrinsic inhibitor of MC1-R activity) was absent or very low (12, 26, 27).
Therefore, the presumed event that prevents the switch from eu- to pheomelanogenesis in 129;B6 Pomc/ mice is the lack or very low concentration of AGP dictated by the (a/a) genotype (12, 26, 27). In turn, this would allow maintenance of eumelanin synthesis through high basal ligand-independent or stimulated MC1-R activity (see above) and appears to be consistent with the hypothesis of a bimodal switch regulating the passage from eu- to pheomelanogenesis (50). Stimulatory signals could also be provided by factors acting at the postreceptor level (MC1-R-independent pathways), either by directly raising intracellular cAMP levels or by stimulating protein kinase A; intracellular second-messenger pathways critical for melanogenesis in rodents (49, 55). This postulation of multiple regulatory points of melanogenesis, i.e. direct regulation through receptor mediated or metabolic action on melanocytes and indirect through stimulation of other cellular targets, which in turn release biologic regulators or simply change the chemical environment of melanocytes is consistent with current concepts of melanin production (51). The process is thought to be redundant and determined by multiple regulatory factors including a time-frame and spatial-temporal dependence on both feedback and feed-forward controls in place from embryonic to adult life (51). The heterogeneous and redundant nature of proeumelanogenic signals explains why the deletion of only one, but a very important, regulatory factor (the agonist ligands for the MC1-R) is not sufficient to produce a dramatic change of melanogenesis in a predominantly C57BL/6 genetic background.
Previously published studies indicated that mammalian MC1-Rs can exhibit agonist-independent, constitutive activity in vitro. One of the first reports (56) used the amelanotic mouse melanoma cell line B16-G4F stably transfected with the human MC1-R. More recently the human MC1-R was shown to constitutively activate cAMP production in transfected, heterologous human embryonic kidney 293T, HeLa, and Chinese hamster ovary cell lines in addition to overexpression in HBL human melanoma cell lines (57). Importantly, the latter study also demonstrated significant constitutive activity of the mouse MC1-R in transfected human embryonic kidney 293T cells. The intrinsic signaling activity of mouse MC1-R was lower than human MC1-R at similar binding site densities, but the two species exhibited comparable augmentation of forskolin-mediated cAMP production (57).
Many other G protein-coupled receptors demonstrate significant constitutive activity (58, 59). Particularly relevant is the finding that both MC3-R and MC4-R have high levels of basal signaling revealed by the inverse agonist activity of agouti-gene-related protein (60). Similarly the endogenous cannibinoid receptors CB1 and CB2 (61, 62), the angiotensin II receptor (63), and several classes of 5-hydroxytryptamine receptors are constitutively active (64, 65). In other cases, such as the mu opioid receptor, prolonged agonist exposure appears to induce constitutive activity in the subsequent absence of ligand (66) and activating mutations can readily be introduced into this and many other G protein-coupled receptors. Notable examples of spontaneous mutations leading to clinical disorders from agonist-independent receptor activation include the TSH receptor associated with thyrotoxicosis (67) and the LH receptor leading to precocious puberty (68). Therefore, ample precedents support the concept of high basal activity of the MC1-R in the absence of melanocortin peptide stimulation.
Within the context of the above, the present findings do not contradict the previous concept of induction of a mild pheomelanin-like phenotype in homozygous Pomc/ mice on a hybrid agouti 129 genetic background that was reverted by
MSH treatment (34). Thus, genetic background represented, i.e. by the presence or absence of AGP, would take priority over the regulatory role of MSH or ACTH in melanogenesis. This is consistent with the current concept proposing that melanogenesis-controlling factors are not arranged in simple linear sequences; instead they interact in a multidimensional network, with extensive overlapping and diversity of factors acting in a stochastic fashion determined by the genetic-biochemical-physical context (51).
In summary, we demonstrate that deletion of the Pomc gene in nonagouti 129;B6 mice does not significantly reduce total melanin production or induce a switch to pheomelanogenesis. We suggest that the phenotype results from ligand-independent activation of MC1-R, which triggers and sustains eumelanogenesis in vivo. This mechanism is consistent with published reports of constitutive MC1-R activity in transfected cell lines in vitro, often positively correlated with increased receptor density per cell, but does not necessarily imply a paramount role in melanogenesis under normal physiological conditions. Our data do not exclude the possibility that genetic deletion of melanocortin ligands has a stimulatory effect on MC1-R signaling by either increases in receptor number or intrinsic activity, and this in turn contributed to the lack of any change in fur pigmentation. Additionally, redundant nonmelanotropic pathway(s) may be recruited to ensure eumelanin pigmentation in the absence of both melanocortin peptides and AGP. One example of an alternative paracrine pathway could involve TRH, which has been demonstrated to bind and activate the MC1-R with low micromolar affinity and to be synthesized in hair follicle papilla fibroblasts (69, 70). Overall, our findings serve to reinforce the conclusion, that despite the overwhelming dominance of POMC-derived peptides in the stimulation of melanogenesis, skin and hair pigmentation are complex, polygenic traits (51).
| Acknowledgments |
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| Footnotes |
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First Published Online November 24, 2004
Abbreviations: AGP, Agouti protein; DPPH, 1,1-diphenyl-2-picrylhydrazyl; EPR, electron paramagnetic resonance; GAPDH, glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase; L-DOPA, L-dihydroxyphenylalanine; MC1-R,melanocortin receptor type 1; POMC, proopiomelanocortin; RT, reverse transcription.
Received June 8, 2004.
Accepted for publication November 19, 2004.
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