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Hemidesmosomes regulate epidermal differentiation during embryogenesis.

Juliet S King1, Kendall J Lough1, Scott E Williams2

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|November 19, 2025
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Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Integrins, crucial for skin cell adhesion, regulate epidermal differentiation. Loss of integrin-β4 or laminin-α3β3ɣ2 increases keratinocyte delamination, impacting skin development.

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Area of Science:

  • Dermatology
  • Cell Biology
  • Developmental Biology

Background:

  • Integrins mediate basal keratinocyte adhesion to the basement membrane in the skin epidermis.
  • High integrin expression correlates with stemness, but direct evidence for their role in basal layer retention is limited.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To investigate the direct role of integrins in keratinocyte retention within the basal epidermal layer.
  • To elucidate the mechanisms by which integrins regulate epidermal differentiation and cell delamination.

Main Methods:

  • Generated mosaic, epidermal-specific loss of integrin-β4 (Itgb4) or laminin-α3β3ɣ2 (Lama3) using in utero lentiviral-mediated gene editing.
  • Analyzed embryonic skin development, apicobasal polarity, cell division orientation, and keratinocyte delamination in knockout models.

Main Results:

  • No embryonic epidermal-dermal separation observed despite gene loss.
  • Itgb4-deficient basal cells exhibited mild defects in oriented cell divisions.
  • Cellular delamination, a differentiation process, was elevated upon Itgb4 and Lama3 loss.
  • Hyperactive Notch signaling decreased integrin-β4 expression and increased delamination.

Conclusions:

  • Hemidesmosomes play a causal role in regulating epidermal differentiation via both mitotic and non-mitotic mechanisms.
  • Integrin-mediated adhesion is critical for maintaining keratinocyte position and regulating differentiation.
  • These findings provide insights into the regulatory programs governing cell delamination in the epidermis.