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Epidermal turnover and iron metabolism in senile lentigo.

Journal of Dermatology 2024 January 14
Senile lentigo (SL) is a pigmentary disorder associated with disrupted epidermal turnover. Trace minerals in the skin are known to regulate keratinocyte proliferation and differentiation. To clarify the role of iron in SL, we compared the expression of molecules related to iron metabolism between SL lesion (lesion) and the surrounding normal skin (nonlesion). Our results revealed that proteins involved in iron uptake and utilization such as transferrin receptor 1, iron regulatory protein 1, mitoferrin 1, and divalent metal transporter 1 were expressed in the lower epidermis in the nonlesion, while expression of them was also observed in the upper epidermis in the lesion. Ferroportin (FPN), involved in iron export, was expressed in the upper epidermis in the nonlesion, but was only scarcely expressed in the upper epidermis in the lesion. Hepcidin, which promotes FPN degradation, was expressed in the lower epidermis in the nonlesion; however, its expression was also observed in the upper epidermis in the lesion. These changes in the expression of molecules involved in iron uptake/export/utilization might reflect the altered iron utilization state in SL, resulting in disruption of keratinocyte differentiation and disturbing epidermal turnover. Our results suggest that the metabolism of iron in keratinocytes in SL differs from that in the normal epidermis, and these changes could be associated with the abnormal epidermal turnover and decreased melanin excretion in SL.

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