Certain stem
cells have a unique ability to move between growth compartments in hair
follicles, but get stuck as people age and so lose their ability to mature and
maintain hair color, a new study shows.
Led by
researchers from NYU Grossman School of Medicine, the new work focused on cells
in the skin of mice and also found in humans called melanocyte stem cells, or
McSCs. Hair color is controlled by whether nonfunctional but continually
multiplying pools of McSCs within hair follicles get the signal to become
mature cells that make the protein pigments responsible for color.
Published in the
journal Nature online April 19, the new
study showed that McSCs are remarkably plastic. This means that during normal
hair growth, such cells continually move back and forth on the maturity axis as
they transit between compartments of the developing hair follicle. It is inside
these compartments where McSCs are exposed to different levels of
maturity-influencing protein signals.
Specifically,
the research team found that McSCs transform between their most primitive stem
cell state and the next stage of their maturation, the transit-amplifying
state, and depending on their location.
The
researchers found that as hair ages, sheds, and then repeatedly grows back,
increasing numbers of McSCs get stuck in the stem cell compartment called the
hair follicle bulge. There, they remain, do not mature into the
transit-amplifying state, and do not travel back to their original location in
the germ compartment, where WNT proteins would have prodded them to regenerate
into pigment cells.
“Our study
adds to our basic understanding of how melanocyte stem cells work to color
hair,” said study lead investigator Qi Sun, PhD, a postdoctoral fellow at NYU
Langone Health. “The newfound mechanisms raise the possibility that the same
fixed positioning of melanocyte stem cells may exist in humans. If so, it presents
a potential pathway for reversing or preventing the graying of human hair by
helping jammed cells to move again between developing hair follicle
compartments.”
Researchers
say McSC plasticity is not present in other self-regenerating stem cells, such
as those making up the hair follicle itself, which are known to move in only
one direction along an established timeline as they mature. For example,
transit-amplifying hair follicle cells never revert to their original stem cell
state. This helps explain in part why hair can keep growing even while its
pigmentation fails, says Dr. Sun.
Earlier work
by the same research team at NYU Grossman School of Medicine showed that WNT
signaling was needed to stimulate the McSCs to mature and produce pigment. That
study had also shown that McSCs were many trillions of times less exposed to
WNT signaling in the hair follicle bulge than in the hair germ compartment,
which is situated directly below the bulge.
In the latest
experiments in mice whose hair was physically aged by plucking and forced
regrowth, the number of hair follicles with McSCs lodged in the follicle bulge
increased from 15 percent before plucking to nearly half after forced aging.
These cells remained incapable of regenerating or maturing into pigment-producing
melanocytes.
The stuck
McSCs, the researchers found, ceased their regenerative behavior as they were
no longer exposed to much WNT signaling and hence their ability to produce
pigment in new hair follicles, which continued to grow.
By contrast,
other McSCs that continued to move back and forth between the follicle bulge
and hair germ retained their ability to regenerate as McSCs, mature into
melanocytes, and produce pigment over the entire study period of two years.
“It is the
loss of chameleon-like function in melanocyte stem cells that may be
responsible for graying and loss of hair color,” said study senior
investigator Mayumi
Ito, PhD, a professor in the Ronald
O. Perelman Department of Dermatology and Department
of Cell Biology at NYU Langone Health.
“These findings
suggest that melanocyte stem cell motility and reversible differentiation are
key to keeping hair healthy and colored,” said Dr. Ito.
Dr. Ito says
the team has plans to investigate means of restoring motility of McSCs or of
physically moving them back to their germ compartment, where they can produce
pigment.
For the study, researchers used recent 3D-intravital-imaging and scRNA-seq techniques to track cells in almost real time as they aged and moved within each hair follicle.
Source: https://nyulangone.org/news/study-links-stuck-stem-cells-hair-turning-gray
Image: Hair-coloring stem cells (at left, in pink) need to be in the hair germ compartment in order to be activated (at right) to develop into pigment.
IMAGE:
SPRINGER-NATURE PUBLISHING
Source: Study Links ‘Stuck’ Stem Cells to Hair Turning Gray – Scents of Science (myfusimotors.com)
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