Melanocyte Biology and Disorders of Pigmentation Flashcards
Melanocytes
cells responsible for making melanosomes
- melanoblast differentiate and migrate to epidermis, hair bulbs of skin, uveal tract of eye, cochlea, vestibular labyrinth, leptomeninges of brain (not retinal pigment)
- reside in basal layer of epidermis
- each melaocyte comes into contact with ~30-40 keratinocytes, allowing transporation of melanosomes
-UV exposure causes increase in size and increase in tyrosinase activity (TX of tyrosinase gene), increase in MC1-R
- UVA causes immediate darkening which fades (mostly in dark-skinned people who have rapid oxidation of existing melanin/precursor)
- delayed tanning within 48-72 hrs after UVA or UVB because of new pigment production following increased tyrosinase activity
Melanosome
organelles that synthesize melanin
- keratinocytes continually phagocytose dendritic tip of melanocyte to take up melanosomes
- melanosomes either degraded by lysosomal enzymes or remain in cell until sloughed at surface of stratum corneum
Melanin
pigment
- contained mostly by keratinocytes
- tyrosinase key in biosynthesis
- key melanogenesis proteins: MSH, endothelin-1, UV light
- formation of diff melanin influenced by binding of melanocyte-stimulating hormone to melanocortin-1 receptor on melanocytes
Eumelain - brown-black
-elevated aMSH, thyroid hormones, estrogen, progesterone, and ACTH levels
pheomelanin - yellow-red
-mutation in MC1-R (also inability to develop tan)
Depigmentation
complete loss of pigment (milk white presentation)
Hypopigmentation
reduced epidermal pigment due to decreased melanocytes or decreased melanin (off-white)
Leukoderma
general term encompassing depigmentation and hypopigmentation
Hyperpigmentation
Melanoderma = increase in melanin deposition
Ceruloderma
gray, slate, blue discoloration arising from increase in number of melanocytes
c-KIT gene
encodes receptor for steel factor
- binding to steel factor results in phosphorylation and cascade of signal transduction
- critical for melanocyte proliferation and migration
Epidermal melanin unit
melanocyte + neighboring keratinocytes it is connected to
Skin color
largely determined by activity of melanocytes and number of melanosomes
- dark skin: singly dispersed, oval shaped melanosomes
- light skin: fewer, smaller, clustered, spherical melanosomes
Vitiligo
common autoimmune inflam –> destroy melanocytes
- depigmented patches, especially around mouth, eyes, nose, hands, and genitals
- possible Koebnerization (dev. disease in trauma area)
- diagnosed via clinical + histopathology
- treated via photoprotection +phototherapy
-also risk of other autoimmune disorders like alopecia areata (focal hair loss), hypothyroidism, and pernicious anemia
Piebaldism
AD inherited melanocyte migration disorder
- white forelock 85-90%
- patterned areas of depigmentation @ midline
- pigment changes found at birth and persist unchanged as melanocytes fail to migrate
- due to mutation in c-KIT gene in group of cells
- c-KIT receptor inactivated = failure of pigmented cells to fully migrate to midline
Pityriasis Alba
disorder of melanocyte downregulation
- ill-defined hypopigmented round patches, sometimes w/ scale
- common among pple with atopic dermatits
- no effective treatment
- apply moisturizer and sunscreen
Oculocutaneous albinism
AR disorder of altered melanin production
- reduction or complete lack of pigment in hair, skin, eyes
- ocular signs: nystagmus, photophobia, bad visual acuity
- most often due to defect in tyrosinase gene
- complete absence of pigment
- risk skin cancer