Assembly of the epidermal cornified cell envelope
Andrey Kalinin
0
Lyuben N. Marekov
0
Peter M. Steinert
0
0
Laboratory of Skin Biology Branch, NIAMS, NIH
,
Bethesda, MD 20892
,
USA (
The cornified cell envelope structure is formed beneath the plasma membrane in terminally differentiating stratified squamous epithelia. It provides a vital physical barrier to these tissues in mammals and consists of a 10 nm thick layer of highly crosslinked insoluble proteins. In the specialized case of the epidermis, a 5 nm thick layer of ceramide lipids is covalently bound to the proteins. These organize extracellular lipids into orderly lamellae and, together, the cell envelope and extracellular lipids are essential for effective physical and water barrier function in the skin.
1. Initiation
As intracellular Ca2+ levels rise in
suprabasal cells, envoplakin (green),
periplakin (red) and involucrin (blue) are
expressed. Envoplakin and periplakin
form stable heterotetramers, and in vitro
data have shown that involucrin and
envoplakin-periplakin heterotetramers
associate with the plasma membrane in
a Ca2+-dependent manner. Coincidently,
the transglutaminase 1 enzyme (purple)
is expressed, and it spontaneously
assembles onto membranes by way of its
acyl lipid adducts. As intracellular (or
localized micro-environmental) Ca2+
levels continue to rise, the enzyme joins
together the plakins and involucrin by
forming N -(g -glutamyl)lysine
isopeptide crosslinks. The enzyme also
crosslinks other membrane-associated
and desmosomal proteins, which
drastically changes the dynamic
properties of cell junctions and
cytoskeletal interactions. Gradually, the
involucrin-envoplakin-periplakin
proteins form a monomolecular layer
along the entire inner surface of the
plasma membrane, including over
desmosomes, to form a scaffold. This
scaffold formation appears to be
common to the assembly of cell
envelope barrier structures of many
other stratified squamous epithelia.
Assembly in epidermal cells, however,
differs in the two subsequent steps.
2. Formation of the corneocyte lipid
In the granular layer, epidermal cells
accumulate lamellar bodies that develop
from and bud off the Golgi complex.
Specialized w -hydroxy-ceramides that
possess a very-long-chain fatty acid
moiety (yellow) are packaged, along
with large amounts of other barrier lipids
(free fatty acids, cholesterol and its
esters, and other ceramides), into both
their limiting membrane and central core
(orange). At a later stage of
differentiation, at the interface of the
granular and cornified layers, fusion of
the lamellar body limiting membranes
with the apical plasma membrane
delivers the contents into the
extracellular milieu. This process
enriches the plasma membrane with w
OH-ceramides, whose fatty acid chains
are long enough (>C30) to span the lipid
bilayer, so that the w -OH projects into
the cell. In vitro data have shown that the
membrane-anchored transglutaminase 1
enzyme can covalently esterify these
ceramides onto glutamine residues of the
scaffold proteins. Eventually, the
ceramides replace the bilayer plasma
membrane and are thought to serve to
interdigitate with and organize the
extracellular lipids into characteristic
lamellae. We believe that fusion of the
lamellar bodies and extrusion of their
contents occurs before the third and final
reinforcement stage of cell envelope
assembly, for simple physical reasons: if
so, then ceramide lipid esterification
might occur at this time as well.
3. Reinforcement
In the case of the epidermis, about 80%
of the cornified cell envelope constitutes
of loricrin (white), complexed with
various amounts of the small
prolinerich (SPR) protein family members
(gray). Loricrin is an insoluble protein
and is initially sequestered into loricrin
granules, whereas SPRs are very soluble.
In vitro data suggest that the cytosolic
transglutaminase 3 enzyme (brown)
crosslinks them together primarily to
form homodimers and heterodimers.
This results in the net solubilization of
loricrin. At some point, these oligomers
are translocated to the cell periphery
again, in vitro data suggest that the
transglutaminase 1 crosslinks them onto
the pre-existing scaffold. Varying
amounts of SPRs are used in the
epidermis of different body sites. One
hypothesis is that the SPRs alter the
biomechanical properties of the tissue in
accordance with specific localized
physical requirements and functions.
Also, minor amounts of other proteins,
including repetin, trichohyalin, cystatin
a , elafin and LEP/XP-5 proteins (black)
become crosslinked to the CE.
Meanwhile, most other cell organelles/
structures, microtubules,
microfilaments, other junctional proteins
including desmosomes, etc. are
degraded. However, keratin intermediate
filaments, at late stages consisting
almost entirely of keratin 1, keratin 2e
and keratin 10, become crosslinked to
the cornified cell envelope to
desmoplakin and envoplakin remnants,
as well as involucrin, loricrin and SPRs.
The final dead cornified cell thus
consists mostly of bundled intermediate
filaments covalently attached to and
enclosed within the cell envelope. The
resulting durable but flexible dead cells
imbedded in the lipid lamellae provide
the vital mechanical and
waterpermeability barrier functions necessary
for the survival of mammals in the
terrestrial environment.
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