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  4. Low temperature and mTOR inhibition favor stem cell maintenance in human keratinocyte cultures
 
research article

Low temperature and mTOR inhibition favor stem cell maintenance in human keratinocyte cultures

Nanba, Daisuke
•
Sakabe, Jun-Ichi
•
Mosig, Johannes  
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May 4, 2023
Embo Reports

Adult autologous human epidermal stem cells can be extensively expanded ex vivo for cell and gene therapy. Identifying the mechanisms involved in stem cell maintenance and defining culture conditions to maintain stemness is critical, because an inadequate environment can result in the rapid conversion of stem cells into progenitors/transient amplifying cells (clonal conversion), with deleterious consequences on the quality of the transplants and their ability to engraft. Here, we demonstrate that cultured human epidermal stem cells respond to a small drop in temperature through thermoTRP channels via mTOR signaling. Exposure of cells to rapamycin or a small drop in temperature induces the nuclear translocation of mTOR with an impact on gene expression. We also demonstrate by single-cell analysis that long-term inhibition of mTORC1 reduces clonal conversion and favors the maintenance of stemness. Taken together, our results demonstrate that human keratinocyte stem cells can adapt to environmental changes (e.g., small variations in temperature) through mTOR signaling and constant inhibition of mTORC1 favors stem cell maintenance, a finding of high importance for regenerative medicine applications.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.15252/embr.202255439
Web of Science ID

WOS:000980905100001

Author(s)
Nanba, Daisuke
Sakabe, Jun-Ichi
Mosig, Johannes  
Brouard, Michel  
Toki, Fujio
Shimokawa, Mariko
Kamiya, Mako
Braschler, Thomas  
Azzabi, Fahd
Lathion, Stephanie Droz-Georget
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Date Issued

2023-05-04

Publisher

WILEY

Published in
Embo Reports
Subjects

Biochemistry & Molecular Biology

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Cell Biology

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Biochemistry & Molecular Biology

•

Cell Biology

•

keratinocyte stem cells

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microenvironment

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mtor

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temperature

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trp channels

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scalp cooling device

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mammalian target

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human epidermis

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hair-follicles

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ion-channel

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rapamycin

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trpv3

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differentiation

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proliferation

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epithelium

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
LDCS  
LMIS4  
Available on Infoscience
May 22, 2023
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/197794
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