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New Hair Loss Gene Identified
Article by HairLossTalk.com:
April 17, 2003
Researchers at Columbia University are uncovering
the mechanisms of previously unknown genes governing hair growth
and cycling. In their latest findings, to be published this Friday,
they identified a new gene that encodes an adhesion protein crucial
for hair growth...
The findings could lead to better, longer-lasting
hair-removal treatments, the researchers say, and might someday
throw light on baldness.
The newly discovered protein, called desmoglein
4 (DSG4), holds cells together as they change into one of many
different types of hair follicle cells. DSG4 ensures that each
cell is in the right place at the right time as it marches alongside
the others when the hair shaft is formed. This way, each cell
receives the right signals to become the right type of hair cell.
“This protein is like the Velcro that holds
the cells together. If they don’t stick together properly,
they become disconnected from their neighbors and can’t
receive instructions properly,” says Dr. Angela M. Christiano,
associate professor of dermatology and genetics & development
at Columbia’s College of Physicians & Surgeons, in whose
laboratory the research was performed.
Without DSG4, “the cells separate from each
other and become disorganized, and rather than the six ordered
layers of a normal hair fiber, you get a cluster of confused cells
in the hair follicle.” As a result, people and mice lacking
the gene have thin, sparse hair that is fragile and breaks easily.
The gene, DSG4, is the third found in Dr. Christiano’s
laboratory to have a role in human hair growth. It’s the
first of the three that codes for a structural protein, meaning
it creates a product that becomes part of the bricks and mortar
of the hair follicle. The other two are regulatory genes, meaning
that rather than produce a structural protein, they are “switch”
genes that turn other genes on and off.
In a sense, Dr. Christiano says, “this is
the first ‘hardware’ gene. The others we identified
are ‘software’ genes.” Both the hardware and
the software are essential for normal hair growth. The findings
are to be published in this Friday’s issue of the journal
Cell.
All three genes could have roles in gene therapy
designed for hair removal – both permanent and temporary
- Dr. Christiano says. Such treatments would involve rubbing lotions
or gels into the skin to inhibit hair growth. “Remarkably,
hair growth is a medical problem for which people want treatment
on both sides of the spectrum (too much and too little)”
and, Dr. Christiano says, “is of interest to both men and
women.”
One such treatment strategy will be to use products
containing ribozymes or antisense RNAs. These are molecules tailor-made
to stick tightly to specific messenger RNA molecules that translate
the gene into working bodily materials. By binding to the RNA
in this way, the antisense molecule inactivates it, and thus the
protein it encodes will not be made.
One of the regulatory genes discovered in Dr. Christiano’s
laboratory appears to have such an important role in hair cycling
that even inactivating it in a given area stops hair growth permanently
in mice, Dr. Christiano says.
According to Columbia University’s technology
transfer unit, Science & Technology Ventures, a start-up company,
Skinetics Bioscience LLC, will form to develop hair-growth and
hair-removal products and conduct clinical trials based on the
findings from Dr. Christiano’s laboratory. Researchers envision
starting clinical trials for hair removal by mid-winter.
Other researchers working on the studies are from
the Columbia Genome Center, Rockefeller University, the Institut
Pasteur in Paris, Durham University in England, and the University
of California, Davis.
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