Epidermal CYP2 family cytochromes P450

L Du, SMG Hoffman, DS Keeney - Toxicology and applied pharmacology, 2004 - Elsevier
L Du, SMG Hoffman, DS Keeney
Toxicology and applied pharmacology, 2004Elsevier
Skin is the largest and most accessible drug-metabolizing organ. In mammals, it is the
competent barrier that protects against exposure to harmful stimuli in the environment and in
the systemic circulation. Skin expresses many cytochromes P450 that have critical roles in
exogenous and endogenous substrate metabolism. Here, we review evidence for epidermal
expression of genes from the large CYP2 gene family, many of which are expressed
preferentially in extrahepatic tissues or specifically in epithelia at the environmental …
Skin is the largest and most accessible drug-metabolizing organ. In mammals, it is the competent barrier that protects against exposure to harmful stimuli in the environment and in the systemic circulation. Skin expresses many cytochromes P450 that have critical roles in exogenous and endogenous substrate metabolism. Here, we review evidence for epidermal expression of genes from the large CYP2 gene family, many of which are expressed preferentially in extrahepatic tissues or specifically in epithelia at the environmental interface. At least 13 CYP2 genes (CYP2A6, 2A7, 2B6, 2C9, 2C18, 2C19, 2D6, 2E1, 2J2, 2R1, 2S1, 2U1, and 2W1) are expressed in skin from at least some human individuals, and the majority of these genes are expressed in epidermis or cultured keratinocytes. Where epidermal expression has been localized in situ by hybridization or immunocytochemistry, CYP2 transcripts and proteins are most often expressed in differentiated keratinocytes comprising the outer (suprabasal) cell layers of the epidermis and skin appendages. The tissue-specific transcriptional regulation of CYP2 genes in the epidermis, and in other epithelia that interface with the environment, suggests important roles for at least some CYP2 gene products in the production and disposition of molecules affecting competency of the epidermal barrier.
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