TLDR Mrp3 helps in wound healing and hair growth.
The study demonstrated that Mrp3, a mitogen-regulated protein, was induced in keratinocytes at the wound edge during cutaneous wound healing and appeared in the outer root sheath of hair follicles during the late anagen phase of the hair cycle. In cultured keratinocytes, Mrp3 was specifically induced by keratinocyte growth factor. Transgenic mice experiments showed wound- and hair cycle-induced expression of a transgene controlled by Mrp3 regulatory sequences. These findings suggested that Mrp3 played a role in wound healing and the hair follicle cycle as a growth factor and/or angiogenesis factor.
16 citations
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May 2000 in “Endocrinology” A new gene, mrp4, is found in mice and may play a unique role in hair follicle development in tails and ears.
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July 1999 in “The EMBO Journal” Overexpression of certain genes can shorten hair by disrupting the hair-growth cycle.
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April 2001 in “The journal of investigative dermatology/Journal of investigative dermatology” Different Myc family proteins are located in various parts of the hair follicle and may affect stem cell behavior.
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October 2000 in “PubMed” E6/E7 oncogenes in hair follicles cause continuous hair growth by skipping the resting phase.
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May 1997 in “Veterinary Pathology” The angora mouse mutation causes long hair and hair defects due to a gene deletion.