Skin lamellar bodies are not discrete vesicles but part of a tubuloreticular network

Publication date

2016-03-01

Authors

Den Hollander, Lianne
Han, Hongmei
de Winter, D A MatthijsISNI 0000000419415994
Svensson, Lennart
Masich, Sergej
Daneholt, Bertil
Norlén, Lars

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article
Open Access logo

License

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