ARTICLE
The hair follicle is unique in that it continuously cycles, undergoing
stages of growth, involution, and rest throughout life. It is well known
that the target tissue active androgen, dihydrotestosterone (DHT) plays
a key role in signaling anagen hair follicles into a miniaturized state,
and with successive hair cycles, produces smaller, finer, thinner, indeterminate
hairs, hence signaling programmed cell death, apoptosis. Finasteride is
a specific 5alpha-reductase type II enzyme blocking agent which inhibits
the formation of DHT, and has been shown to be effective in treating men
aged 18-41 years, with AGA. Patients taking finasteride show stabilization
and improvement in hair growth on the top of the scalp producing thicker,
longer hair follicles in 86% of men [1]. The effects of finasteride on
the regulation of the hair cycle and apoptosis has not been determined.
Since finasteride selectively inhibits DHT production, this study may
indicate specific androgen responsive genes, such as those that regulate
programmed cell death as they affect hair growth.
Recent experimental evidence suggests that apoptosis is an important
event in regulation of the hair cycle as anagen hairs normally grow for
4-7 years, then cycle into resting phases of catagen, telogen. For this
cycle to occur, specific apoptotic events take place, which may involve
caspases, which are cysteine proteases that play an important role in
the effector phase of programmed cell death or apoptosis [2]. The mammalian
caspase family currently comprises over 10 known members. These include:
caspase-1 (ICE); caspase 2 (ICH-1); caspase 3 (CPP-32, Yama, apopain);
caspase 4 (TX, ICH-2, ICE-rel-II); caspase 5 (ICE rel-III, TY); caspase
6 (Mch-2); caspase 7 (Mch3, ICE-LAP3, CMH-1); caspase 8 (MACH, FLICE,
Mch5); caspase 9 (ICE-LAP6, Mch6); caspase 10 (Mch-4) [3].
Apoptosis has been frequently observed in a variety of pathological
states in these tissues, including alopecia areata, lichen planus, fixed
drug eruptions, graft versus host reactions, warts, and neoplasias.
We hypothesize that regulation of hair follicles undergoing miniaturization
due to the influence of DHT may involve the caspase apoptotic death pathway.
Finasteride's effect in blocking or inhibiting the synthesis of DHT
may affect specific caspases involved in the signaling of cell death,
which improves hair growth by allowing the hair to return to its normal
cycle. We therefore propose to examine whether finasteride interferes
with apoptosis in hair follicles via a caspase dependent pathway. Our
results are important in that they provide further information about the
molecular mechanisms and key regulators of apoptosis in the epidermal
and dermal tissues as well as helping to define critical periods for effective
therapeutic treatment. A more precise understanding of the mechanisms
governing the action of finasteride may help form the basis for further
developments of new strategies for successful treatment of hair diseases.
Materials and methods
Ten men, ages 18-35 years, with normal scalp hair (Norwood Hamilton
Stage 1), were recruited for donation of 1 (4 mm) punch scalp biopsy.
In the next group 10 patients, males aged 18-35 years, had AGA with stages
III-V on the Norwood Hamilton Scale. These individuals were biopsied at
the screening visit where a 4 mm punch scalp biopsy was obtained from
the thinning vertex affected area. These patients were then placed on
finasteride 1 mg/day treatment for 6 months, after which a 2nd punch biopsy
was obtained for comparison studies. All patients had history and physical
exams prior to enrollment in the study, which was approved by the local
IRB, and each patient signed informed consent to the study.
Histological analysis
Scalp biopsies from patients were frozen at 40° C and delivered
to University of Miami Dept Physiology labs for further processing. Biopsy
pieces were cut in half and fixed in formalin, embedded in polyester wax
and 10 muM sections cut. Sets of 10 serial sections were placed onto consecutive
slides. Eight slides were double stained for caspases or usurpin (flip)
and cell type markers for hair and skin cells; the remaining 2 slides
were kept in case of technical difficulties. Anti-caspase antibodies against
all the known caspases, usurpin/flip were provided by Dr. Donald Nicholson,
MerckFrosst, Kirkland, Canada. Cells were double-stained with anti-caspase
antibodies followed by biotinylated horse anti-rabbit immunoglobulin (1:100
Vector elite ABC kit) and streptavidin-horseradish peroxidase followed
by 3-3'diaminobenzidine (DAB) until a brown reaction product was observed
[4]. Sections were immunohistochemically stained with antibodies that
identify keratinocytes, fibroblasts, melanocytes, dermal papilla cells
of hair follicles, followed by TrueBlue. Double labeled profiles stain
deep purple or black when co-localization occurs because the TrueBlue
reaction product is blue and DAB is brown. Negative controls were performed
in parallel without primary antibody. Specificity of binding was evaluated
in control labelings using irrelevant antibodies of the same class, and
controls using secondary antibodies alone. For accurate quantification,
means of antibody positive cells and differences among experimental groups
were analyzed by one-factor ANOVA and Bonferroni's multiple comparison
test.
Results
Immunohistochemical findings of caspase expression
Table I summarizes the
results of immunohistochemical staining of activated caspases 1-10, usurpin
and XIAP in normal human hair from the scalp. Tables
II and III summarize the results of positive immunoreactivity
for men with AGA affected scalp and the same men 6 months after finasteride
treatment, respectively. Histological analysis reveals that caspases 1,
3, 8 and 9 are all detected predominately within the isthmic and upper
portion of the hair shaft in both normal and AGA patients. This is the
area where the inner and outer root sheaths still surround the hair shaft.
Staining is detected in sections of lower isthmus, near the sebaceous
duct where the infundibulum commences. Within the catagen phase of the
hair follicle cycle, more robust staining for activated caspase-3 was
observed than in any other phases of the cycle, suggesting an effector
role for caspase-3 in the distal portion of the hair apoptotic pathway.
A very different pattern of immunostaining was evident in the hair bulb
where weaker immunoreactivity was observed for activated caspase-1, -3,
and -9 only.
Overall, in the epidermis, the sebaceous gland and eccrine glands of
normal scalp demonstrated positive immunoreactivity for caspases 1, 3,
8 and XIAP. All specimens, whether normal or AGA affected, as well as
treated specimens, exhibit the same caspases, however, the levels of expression
differ between the groups. In AGA affected tissues, the expression of
caspase 1, 3, 8 and 9 is greater then normal, and after 6 months of finasteride
treatment, the expression of caspases decreases, similar to the level
found in normal scalp.
Discussion
The hair follicle has been described as having 3 stages of growth: anagen,
catagen and telogen. Based on morphological evidence, this unique dermal
structure undergoes involution, which to a large extent reflects coordinated
keratinocyte apoptosis in the regressing proximal hair bulb. In mice,
the steady state mRNA levels for some of the gene products implicated
in the control of apoptosis, i.e., Fas, transforming growth factor
(TGF-beta) and tumor necrosis factor (TNF-beta), rise when a follicle
enters into anagen-catagen-telogen transformation of the hair cycle [5].
In sheep, the infusion of epidermal growth factor (EGF) induces synchronized
catagen by triggering massive keratinocyte apoptosis in the proximal hair
bulb [6, 7], and multiple additional signaling molecules have been implicated
in the control of catagen, i.e., fibroblast growth factor (FGF)-5,
TGF-beta, insulin-like growth factor (IGF)-1, parathyroid hormone related
peptide (PTHrp) [8, 9]. However, the direct role that these factors play
in the control of follicle keratinocyte apoptosis in situ has not
been clarified.
Our results demonstrate that caspase 1 and 3 are expressed in discrete
areas of the hair follicle. It appears that all the caspase family members
are expressed in normal cells in an enzymatically inactive pro-form, and
that upon the onset of apoptosis they are converted to an enzymatically
active processed form via a poorly understood mechanism involving either
oligomerization, self-proteolysis or cleavage by another family member
or both [10, 11]. To date, only a few different cellular substrates for
the caspase family have been identified, suggesting an unusually high
substrate specificity for these proteases [10, 12]. All members of the
protease family show an extremely high prefe-rence for cleavage of their
substrates after an aspartyl residue at the P1 position [13-16]. Once
activated, caspases are sensitive to inhibition by the viral products
CrmA [17, 18] and p35 [19, 20], and perhaps more significantly from the
point of normal regulation, by endogenous inhibitors, X-linked inhibitor
of apoptosis (XIAP) [21]. It is unclear why cells that have committed
apoptosis would need an inhibitor, so presumably XIAP, which seems to
be targeted against caspases 3 and 7 [21], serves to regulate adventitious
proteolysis before it has reached the catastrophic threshold [22].
When defining the differences in caspase expression in normal men compared
to men with AGA then treated for 6 months with finasteride, it was found
that caspase 1, 3, 8 and 9 are present, but that levels of caspases differed
in the groups. It may be that DHT affects the balance of cytokines and
growth factors that affect specific caspases in the hair follicle, giving
more value to systemic inhibition of DHT affecting the hair cycle. Use
of finasteride for treating AGA may be to inhibit cellular formation of
DHT which may affect caspase levels that induce apoptosis and miniaturize
the hair follicle.
The immunohistochemical findings (Table
I-III) demonstrate the importance of caspase 3 in normal hair homeostatsis
and that different areas of the hair follicle selectively regulate the
caspase system which may play an important role in signaling various stages
of the hair cycle. Also, finasteride treatment altered caspase expression
in the hair follicle. Similarly, caspase 3 plays a key role in apoptosis
in neurons and astrocytes [23].
Recent reports have shown that apoptosis contributes
to different phases of the hair cycle. It is now firmly established that
apoptosis is regulated by an intracellular proteolytic cascade, primarily
mediated by members of the caspase family of cysteine proteases, which
cleave one another and various key intracellular target proteins to destroy
the cell. Two prototypical signalling pathways for the induction of apoptosis
have been described [24]. One pathway involves ligation of death receptors
that activate procaspase 8 and possibly other initiator caspases. The
other pathway is controlled by the mitochondrion and involves the apoptosis
protease inducing factor-1 (Apaf-1). Once activated by cytochrome c, Apaf-1,
together with cofactor nucleotide triphosphates (dATP, or ATP), they then
bind and activate procaspase 9, which in turn cleaves and activates caspase
3 and other downstream caspases. Therefore, caspase 8 and 9 represent
the pinnical caspases in the death receptors and cytochrome c/Apap-1 pathways
respectively.
Our studies demonstrate that the death of hair follicles involves distinct
patterns of expression of active caspases. Active caspase 8, an initiator
of the death receptor pathway, was predominately found in the isthmic
and upper lower portion of the shaft. This pattern of expression suggests
that the death receptor pathway is activated during hair renewal and is
initiated by toxic substances that bind to death receptors, i.e.,
TNF-alpha. Interestingly, activated caspase 3, a downstream effector caspase,
was higher in catagen hair then in other phases of the hair cycle, indicating
a role in the terminal stage of the apoptotic pathway. Activated caspase
1 was also found in the hair bulb and hair shaft. We did find appreciable
changes in the levels of expression of caspase 1 before and after finasteride
treatment in AGA, suggesting that caspase 1 may play an important role
in inflammation by activating cytokines, as well as mediating apoptosis
in normal hair regulation. Previous to this study, the dermal papilla
area of the hair follicle was thought to be the main control focus of
cell growth and inhibition [25]. The findings from this study also suggest
an important role of the upper-lower portion, infundibular area of the
hair shaft where inner and outer root sheath are abruptly changing and
that this area may play a role in the regulation of normal hair apoptosis.
Caspase 3 seems to be playing the key role in the apoptotic pathway during
the catagen phase of the hair cycle in these areas. Finasteride may exhibit
its influence by selectively inhibiting DHT, which affects a multitude
of "androgen responsive genes", such as the caspase pathway, which affects
programmed cell death in the hair cycle
CONCLUSION
Acknowledgements
This work was supported by an educational grant from Merck & Co,
whitehouse station, NJ, USA.
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