Skin lamellar bodies are not discrete vesicles but part of a tubuloreticular network
Publication date
2016-03-01
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taverne
Abstract
Improved knowledge of the topology of lamellar bodies is a prerequisite for a molecular-level understanding of skin barrier formation, which in turn may provide clues as to the underlying causes of barrier-deficient skin disease. The aim of this study was to examine the key question of continuity vs. discreteness of the lamellar body system using 3 highly specialized and complementary 3-dimensional (3D) electron microscopy methodologies; tomography of vitreous sections (TOVIS), freeze-substitution serial section electron tomography (FS-SET), and focused ion beam scanning electron microscopy (FIBSEM) tomography. We present here direct evidence that lamellar bodies are not discrete vesicles, but are part of a tubuloreticular membrane network filling out the cytoplasm and being continuous with the plasma membrane of stratum granulosum cells. This implies that skin barrier formation could be regarded as a membrane folding/ unfolding process, but not as a lamellar body fusion process.
Keywords
CEMOVIS, FIB-SEM, FSSET, Skin barrier, TOVIS, Taverne, Dermatology
Citation
Den Hollander, L, Han, H, De Winter, M, Svensson, L, Masich, S, Daneholt, B & Norlén, L 2016, 'Skin lamellar bodies are not discrete vesicles but part of a tubuloreticular network', Acta Dermato-Venereologica, vol. 96, no. 3, pp. 303-308. https://doi.org/10.2340/00015555-2249