Citation

  • Authors: Lee, H. J., Park, M. K., Lee, E. J., Kim, Y. L., Kim, H. J., Kang, J. H., Kim, H. M., Lee, A. Y., Lee, C. H.
  • Year: 2012
  • Journal: Int J Biochem Cell Biol 44 2124-8
  • Applications: in vitro / DNA / jetPEI
  • Cell type: SK-MEL-2

Abstract

Vitiligo is a progressive depigmenting disorder. Histamine has been shown to induce melanogenesis via histamine receptor 2, suggesting the possibility of histamine as a repigmenting agent for the treatment of vitiligo. However, the role and signaling mechanism of histamine are still unclear in melanogenesis, especially in relation to growth-differentiation factor-15, which is a protein belonging to transforming growth factor beta and found to be overexpressed in metastatic or malignant melanoma. We found that histamine induces growth-differentiation factor-15 in melanoma cell lines such as SK-MEL-2, B16F10, and melan-a cells. Therefore, in the present study, the role of growth-differentiation factor-15 in histamine-induced melanogenesis was investigated using gene silencing or overexpression of growth-differentiation factor-15 and histamine related compounds such as histamine, amthamine, and cimetidine. Gene silencing of growth-differentiation factor-15 suppressed histamine-induced proliferation, melanin production, tyrosinase activity, and chemotactic migration of SK-MEL-2 cells. Histamine-induced expression of tyrosinase, tyrosinase-related protein 1, and tyrosinase-related protein 2 was also suppressed by growth-differentiation factor-15 gene silencing. On the other hand, overexpression of growth-differentiation factor-15 using a plasmid containing growth-differentiation factor-15 in SK-MEL-2 cells increased melanin production and chemotactic migration. Amthamine induced expression of growth-differentiation factor-15 in a time and concentration dependent manner. Amthamine-induced expression of growth-differentiation factor-15 was suppressed by cimetidine. Our results suggest that growth-differentiation factor-15 is a new player in histamine-induced melanogenesis, which can help researchers to extend the knowledge of the role of the transforming growth factor beta family in melanogenesis and in skin pigment disorders such as vitiligo.

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