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p53 is essential for chemotherapy-induced hair loss.
136
Citations
16
References
2000
Year
Chemoprevention StrategyHair LossMedicineApoptosisChemotherapy-induced Hair LossPathologyCell DeathMouse ModelAnti-cancer AgentTumor SuppressorDermatologyCancer TreatmentOncologyCell BiologyCancer ResearchTumor MicroenvironmentTumor BiologyP53 Mutants
Anticancer drugs stimulate apoptosis in the hair follicles (HF) and cause hair loss, the most common side effect of chemotherapy. In a mouse model for chemotherapy-induced hair loss, we demonstrate that p53 is essential for this process: in contrast to wild-type mice, p53-deficient mice show neither hair loss nor apoptosis in the HF keratinocytes that maintained active proliferation after cyclophosphamide treatment. HF in p53 mutants are characterized by down-regulation of Fas and insulin-like growth factor-binding protein 3 and by increased expression of Bcl-2. These observations indicate that local pharmacological inhibition of p53 may be useful to prevent chemotherapy-associated hair loss.
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