Modern Medical Laboratory Journal- Journal News
Melanocyte stem cells' role in hair turning gray!

Clear images and colors  | Post date: 2023/04/25 | 
the results of a study conducted by researchers from NYU Grossman School of Medicine revealed that hair color is controlled by whether nonfunctional but continually multiplying pools of melanocyte stem cells (McSCs) within hair follicles get the signal to become mature cells that make the protein pigments responsible for color. For unknown reasons, the McSCs system fails earlier than other adult stem cell populations, which leads to hair greying in most humans and mice. Current dogma states that McSCs are reserved in an undifferentiated state in the hair follicle niche, physically segregated from differentiated progeny that migrate away following cues of regenerative stimuli. In this study, researchers show that most McSCs toggle between transit-amplifying and stem cell states for both self-renewal and generation of mature progeny, a mechanism fundamentally distinct from those of other self-renewing systems. Live imaging and single-cell RNA sequencing revealed that McSCs are mobile, translocating between hair follicle stem cells and transit-amplifying compartments where they reversibly enter distinct differentiation states governed by local microenvironmental cues (for example, WNT). Long-term lineage tracing demonstrated that the McSC system is maintained by reverted McSCs rather than by reserved stem cells inherently exempt from reversible changes. During ageing, there is accumulation of stranded McSCs that do not contribute to the regeneration of melanocyte progeny. These results identify a new model whereby dedifferentiation is integral to homeostatic stem cell maintenance and suggest that modulating McSC mobility may represent a new approach for the prevention of hair greying.

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