Postnatal changes and sexual dimorphism in collagen expression in mouse skin.

To investigate sexual dimorphism and postnatal changes in skin collagen expression, mRNA levels of collagens and their regulatory factors in male and female skin were examined during the first 120 days of age by quantitative realtime PCR. Levels of mRNAs encoding extracellular matrices did not show...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Koji Y Arai, Takuya Hara, Toyofumi Nagatsuka, Chikako Kudo, Sho Tsuchiya, Yoshihiro Nomura, Toshio Nishiyama
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2017-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5426772?pdf=render
id doaj-5a9c583cace54497bde02d07941b4e9f
record_format Article
spelling doaj-5a9c583cace54497bde02d07941b4e9f2020-11-24T22:11:42ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032017-01-01125e017753410.1371/journal.pone.0177534Postnatal changes and sexual dimorphism in collagen expression in mouse skin.Koji Y AraiTakuya HaraToyofumi NagatsukaChikako KudoSho TsuchiyaYoshihiro NomuraToshio NishiyamaTo investigate sexual dimorphism and postnatal changes in skin collagen expression, mRNA levels of collagens and their regulatory factors in male and female skin were examined during the first 120 days of age by quantitative realtime PCR. Levels of mRNAs encoding extracellular matrices did not show any differences between male and female mice until day 15. Col1a1 and Col1a2 mRNAs noticeably increased at day 30 and remained at high levels until day 120 in male mice, while those in female mice remained at low levels during the period. Consistent with the mRNA expression, pepsin-soluble type I collagen contents in skin was very high in mature male as compared to female. Col3a1 mRNA in male mice also showed significantly high level at day 120 as compared to female. On the other hand, expression of mRNAs encoding TGF-ßs and their receptors did not show apparent sexual dimorphism although small significant differences were observed at some points. Castration at 60 days of age resulted in a significant decrease in type I collagen mRNA expression within 3 days, and noticeably decreased expression of all fibril collagen mRNAs examined within 14 days, while administration of testosterone tube maintained the mRNA expression at high levels. Despite the in vivo effect of testosterone, administration of physiological concentrations of testosterone did not affect fibril collagen mRNA expression in either human or mouse skin fibroblasts in vitro, suggesting that testosterone does not directly affect collagen expression in fibroblasts. In summary, present study demonstrated dynamic postnatal changes in expression of collagens and their regulatory factors, and suggest that testosterone and its effects on collagen expression are responsible for the skin sexual dimorphism but the effects of testosterone is not due to direct action on dermal fibroblasts.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5426772?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Koji Y Arai
Takuya Hara
Toyofumi Nagatsuka
Chikako Kudo
Sho Tsuchiya
Yoshihiro Nomura
Toshio Nishiyama
spellingShingle Koji Y Arai
Takuya Hara
Toyofumi Nagatsuka
Chikako Kudo
Sho Tsuchiya
Yoshihiro Nomura
Toshio Nishiyama
Postnatal changes and sexual dimorphism in collagen expression in mouse skin.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Koji Y Arai
Takuya Hara
Toyofumi Nagatsuka
Chikako Kudo
Sho Tsuchiya
Yoshihiro Nomura
Toshio Nishiyama
author_sort Koji Y Arai
title Postnatal changes and sexual dimorphism in collagen expression in mouse skin.
title_short Postnatal changes and sexual dimorphism in collagen expression in mouse skin.
title_full Postnatal changes and sexual dimorphism in collagen expression in mouse skin.
title_fullStr Postnatal changes and sexual dimorphism in collagen expression in mouse skin.
title_full_unstemmed Postnatal changes and sexual dimorphism in collagen expression in mouse skin.
title_sort postnatal changes and sexual dimorphism in collagen expression in mouse skin.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2017-01-01
description To investigate sexual dimorphism and postnatal changes in skin collagen expression, mRNA levels of collagens and their regulatory factors in male and female skin were examined during the first 120 days of age by quantitative realtime PCR. Levels of mRNAs encoding extracellular matrices did not show any differences between male and female mice until day 15. Col1a1 and Col1a2 mRNAs noticeably increased at day 30 and remained at high levels until day 120 in male mice, while those in female mice remained at low levels during the period. Consistent with the mRNA expression, pepsin-soluble type I collagen contents in skin was very high in mature male as compared to female. Col3a1 mRNA in male mice also showed significantly high level at day 120 as compared to female. On the other hand, expression of mRNAs encoding TGF-ßs and their receptors did not show apparent sexual dimorphism although small significant differences were observed at some points. Castration at 60 days of age resulted in a significant decrease in type I collagen mRNA expression within 3 days, and noticeably decreased expression of all fibril collagen mRNAs examined within 14 days, while administration of testosterone tube maintained the mRNA expression at high levels. Despite the in vivo effect of testosterone, administration of physiological concentrations of testosterone did not affect fibril collagen mRNA expression in either human or mouse skin fibroblasts in vitro, suggesting that testosterone does not directly affect collagen expression in fibroblasts. In summary, present study demonstrated dynamic postnatal changes in expression of collagens and their regulatory factors, and suggest that testosterone and its effects on collagen expression are responsible for the skin sexual dimorphism but the effects of testosterone is not due to direct action on dermal fibroblasts.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5426772?pdf=render
work_keys_str_mv AT kojiyarai postnatalchangesandsexualdimorphismincollagenexpressioninmouseskin
AT takuyahara postnatalchangesandsexualdimorphismincollagenexpressioninmouseskin
AT toyofuminagatsuka postnatalchangesandsexualdimorphismincollagenexpressioninmouseskin
AT chikakokudo postnatalchangesandsexualdimorphismincollagenexpressioninmouseskin
AT shotsuchiya postnatalchangesandsexualdimorphismincollagenexpressioninmouseskin
AT yoshihironomura postnatalchangesandsexualdimorphismincollagenexpressioninmouseskin
AT toshionishiyama postnatalchangesandsexualdimorphismincollagenexpressioninmouseskin
_version_ 1725804501979365376