Copyright ©The Histochemical Society, Inc.

Multiple Roles for Elastic Fibers in the Skin

Barry Starcher, Ronnie L. Aycock and Charles H. Hill

Department of Biochemistry, University of Texas Health Center at Tyler, Tyler, Texas (BS,RLA) and Department of Poultry Science, North Carolina State University, Raleigh, North Carolina (CHH)

Correspondence to: Barry Starcher, Department of Biochemistry, University of Texas Health Center at Tyler, 11937 US Highway 271, Tyler, TX 75705. E-mail: barry.starcher{at}uthct.edu


    Summary
 Top
 Summary
 Introduction
 Materials and Methods
 Results
 Discussion
 Literature Cited
 
Dermal elastic fibers are believed to have a primary role in providing elastic stretch and recoil to the skin. Here we compare the structural arrangement of dermal elastic fibers of chick skin and different animal species. Most elastic fibers in chick skin are derived from cells that line the feather follicle and/or smooth muscle that connects the pterial and apterial muscle bundles to feather follicles. Elastic fibers in the dermis of animals with single, primary hair follicles are derived from cells lining the hair follicle or from the ends of the pili muscle, which anchors the muscle to the matrix or to the hair follicle. Each follicle is interconnected with elastic fibers. Follicles of animals with primary and secondary (wool) hair follicles are also interconnected by elastic fibers, yet only the elastic fibers derived from the primary follicle are connected to each primary follicle. Only the primary hair follicles are connected to the pili muscle. Human skin, but not the skin of other primates, is significantly different from other animals with respect to elastic fiber organization and probably cell of origin. The data suggest that the primary role for elastic fibers in animals, with the possible exception of humans, is movement and/or placement of feathers or hair. (J Histochem Cytochem 53:431–443, 2005)

Key Words: elastic fibers • skin • follicle


    Introduction
 Top
 Summary
 Introduction
 Materials and Methods
 Results
 Discussion
 Literature Cited
 
THE ROLE OF ELASTIC FIBERS in the skin is of notable cosmetic interest, inasmuch as these have long been regarded as a critical element in maintaining skin elasticity. Wrinkling of the skin with age has been associated with elastic fiber degeneration due to innate aging (Kligman et al. 1985Go), coupled with the unusually slow repair and regenerative capacity of elastin (Uitto et al. 1989Go; Uitto 1997Go). Superimposed on the normal aging process is the actinic damage caused by exposure to UV irradiation from the sun (Kligman 1986Go; Fisher et al. 1997Go; Hadshiew et al. 2000Go). Heavy smokers develop excessively wrinkled skin, a condition that has also been attributed partially to accelerated elastic fiber destruction (Daniell 1971Go; Lopez Hernandez et al. 1995Go; Smith and Fenske 1996Go; Koh et al. 2002Go). The advent of tissue engineering has stimulated interest in elastic fiber assembly within synthetic matrices, as attempts are made to confer the correct physical properties inherent in blood vessels or skin. The physical mechanism underlying the conferring of elasticity, and the architectural arrangement of elastic fibers in tissues that enables these fibers to perform this important function remain unknown.

The skin is the largest single organ of the vertebrate body, covering its entire surface, along with accessory organs such as various glands, nails, and hair or feathers. With the exception of birds, which are covered with feathers, most animals are covered with hair over much of the body. With certain unique exceptions, hair and feathers perform similar roles physiologically and share many anatomical similarities. Both hair and feathers are enclosed by a follicle or sheath derived primarily from epithelial cells. Movement of feathers is directed by multiple bands of smooth muscle attached to the follicles by elastic fibers, whereas the movement of hair is directed by a single arrector pili muscle, also linked to the hair follicle by elastic fibers. Although anatomically the arrangement of the smooth muscle–elastic fiber network is quite different between hair and feathers, we suggest that the mechanical performance of elastic fibers in the skin may be the same for almost all animals.

Traditionally, dermal fibroblasts have been considered to be the source of the elastic fibers in the skin (Pieraggi et al. 1985Go; Sephel and Davidson 1986Go). Recent studies have indicated that elastic fibers in the skin of mice are derived not from fibroblastic cells but from epithelial-like cells surrounding the hair follicle (Starcher et al. 1999Go). This observation raises the possibility that elastic fibers in the skin of all animals are follicle associated and have a role in hair or feather movement, as well as maintenance of skin elasticity. The present studies were designed to examine more closely the relationship between elastic fibers and feather or hair follicles.


    Materials and Methods
 Top
 Summary
 Introduction
 Materials and Methods
 Results
 Discussion
 Literature Cited
 
Skin was obtained from all animals immediately following death and was placed in Excell fixative (American Master Tech; Lodi, CA). In many instances, we had no way to document the age of the animals; however, all were presumed to be adults, except where noted. Histology specimens were cut in sagittal section (parallel to the body plane) or from a 3-mm biopsy punch for enface sectioning. The biopsy punch was deep enough to include the pernicious carnosus muscle layer (when present) and elastic sheath beneath it. The samples were paraffin embedded, and 7-µm sections were stained for elastin with a modification of Hart's resorcin–fuchsin stain for elastin (Luna 1968Go). Potassium permanganate and oxalic acid washes were not used prior to staining. After incubation overnight in Hart's working solution, the slides were rinsed in water and counterstained with either 2% tartrazine in 0.5% acetic acid or van Gieson's solution (Luna 1968Go). Gomori's trichrome was used to stain for collagen and smooth muscle (Luna 1968Go). To show the relationship between elastic fibers and the pili muscle, we stained the sections for elastin first and subsequently immunostained them for alpha-actin. Following counterstaining, the hydrated slides were blocked for nonspecific binding by incubating for 1 hr in 10% bovine serum albumin (BSA) and rinsed once with wash solution (KPL; Gaithersburg, MD). Exogenous peroxidase activity was blocked by incubating the slides for 20 min in 1% H2O2 in methanol. The slides were then rinsed with HRP-enhancing wash buffer (Innovex Biosciences; Richmond, CA) and incubated for 1 hr with a monoclonal anti-{alpha} smooth-muscle actin (Sigma; St Louis, MO) diluted 1:200 in BSA diluent blocking solution (KPL). The slides were then rinsed with enhancing wash buffer and incubated for 30 min with a 1:1000 dilution of biotinylated goat anti-mouse (KPL). After rinsing with wash solution, the sections were reacted for 30 min with streptavadin-labeled peroxidase (Innovex). The slides were then rinsed well with wash solution and incubated for 10 min with AEC reagent (Innovex). The slides were washed with water and mounted with crystal mount (Biomeda; Foster City, CA).

Desmosine analysis was used in each of the various skin samples in this study as a method for measuring the elastin content of the skin. After removing the hair, a 4-mm biopsy punch was obtained from each fixed skin and placed in a secure-lock microfuge tube. The sample was hydrolyzed in 500 µl of 6 N HCl at 105C for 24 hr. The hydrolysate was evaporated to dryness, re-dissolved in 200 µl water, and microfuged to remove insoluble material. Twenty µl was removed for desmosine analysis by radioimmunoassay (Starcher and Conrad 1995Go), and 1 µl was used for protein determination using a ninhydrin-based assay described previously (Starcher 2001Go).


    Results
 Top
 Summary
 Introduction
 Materials and Methods
 Results
 Discussion
 Literature Cited
 
Elastin Content of Skin of Different Animals
Desmosine is a cross-linking amino acid found only in elastin in animal tissue and is commonly used as a quantitative determinant of elastin content (Starcher and Conrad 1995Go). The desmosine content of skin from the various animals employed in this study is shown in Table 1. Most animal skin contained from 100 to 300 pmol desmosine/mg protein. The human skin used in this study was from an 8-month-old child and was significantly higher in elastin content than the other animals, with a value of 600 pmol/mg protein. Adult human skin may have an even higher elastin content, but age differences were not studied. In contrast, mole and gopher skin were quite low in elastin, with levels of < 50 pmol desmosine/mg protein.


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Table 1

Desmosine content in a 4-mm biopsy punch from the skin of various animals

 
Avian Skin Elastin
Contrary to popular belief, most avian species are not covered with feathers over the entire body. The plumage is interrupted and segregated into feathered tracts (pterylae) intermingled with featherless areas (apteria). The two skin regions differ substantially in elastic fiber arrangement, yet both areas contain elastic fiber structures unique to avian skin. Embryonically, the wall of the feather follicle is fairly well differentiated by the 14th–15th day of incubation, but elastic fibers have not yet formed around the follicle and the feather muscles remain unattached to the follicle by elastic fibers (Figure 1A). By day 16 of incubation, a few elastic fibers have formed in the compact matrix immediately surrounding each follicle and are starting to tie the smooth muscle to the follicle (Figure 1B). Many of these fibers are punctate in appearance and stain poorly. Between day 19 and hatching at day 21, there is a rapid development of elastic fibers surrounding the follicle, which form a readily visible, fine filamentous network of fibers that appear to connect the smooth muscle bands to the follicles. Connections can be seen between follicles (Figure 1C). Within the first few days after hatching, the elastin mesh around the follicle and on the ends of the muscle bundles becomes more prominent, with a concentration of elastic fibers at the site of smooth muscle attachment to the follicle. Even at this point, not all of the smooth muscle bundles show well-developed elastin attachments sites. After 3 weeks of age, the elastic fiber complex appears complete and is particularly evident toward the apex of the follicle, where many feather muscles from adjoining follicles are attached (Figure 1D). A dense network of elastic fibers surrounds the feather follicle and is tied into the heavy elastic fibers attached to the muscle bundles that extend out toward other follicles. Some of these feather muscles, which tie into the apex of the feather follicle, extend out to apterial regions, much like a cable, consisting of alternating elastin-rich segments (elastic ligaments) and apterial muscle bundles (Figure 1E). These unique, cable-like structures, ranging from 9 to 35 µm in diameter, stretch between follicles in the apterial and pterylae tracts, ostensibly to complete the connection between all feather follicles. The development of these cable structures begins shortly after hatching with the appearance of elastic fibers in discrete regions of what was previously a long continuous band of smooth muscle (Figure 1F).



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Figure 1

Elastic fiber–smooth muscle relationship in chicken skin. Enface sections showing (A) smooth muscle band connections between feather follicles of 14- to 15-day chick embryo skin with no detectable elastic fibers; (B) 16-day embryo skin showing the early development of elastic fibers around a feather follicle; (C) feather follicle from chick skin just after hatching, illustrating the developing elastic fiber network surrounding the follicle and connections with the smooth muscle bundles; (D) 3-week-old chick skin showing the highly developed elastic fiber mesh surrounding a feather follicle and the heavy bands of elastic fibers extending from smooth muscle bundles; (E) sagittal section of 10-day chick skin illustrating the alternating elastic fiber–smooth muscle cable-like structure connecting feather follicles separated by some distance in the apterial regions; (F) section of 1-day-old chick skin illustrating how the elastic fibers develop in discrete areas within the bundles of smooth muscle; (G) higher power view of a mature cable structure showing the sharp line of demarcation between the elastic ligaments and apterial smooth muscle. FF, feather follicle; E, elastin; SM, smooth muscle; EP, epithelium. Hart's elastic stain counterstained with tartrazine (A,B,C,G) and van Gieson's stain (D,F). Magnification x400 (A,B,G), x165 (F), x65 (C,E).

 
The partitions between smooth muscle and elastin that develop on the long smooth muscle extensions appear to be precisely located and remain as a sharply demarcated line throughout development (Figure 1G). There is no evidence of elastic fibers in the dermis except for those associated with the feather follicles, blood vessels, and the pernicious carnosus muscle layer.

Mammalian Skin Elastin
The investigated animals were divided into two broad categories, one in which the coat consists of single uniform hairs, and the other in which the coat consists of major hair follicles surrounded by fine hair or wool. Examples of each are illustrated below.

Single (Primary) Hair Follicles
The distinguishing feature about the hair in this type of skin is that the follicles are not arranged in groups but stand as individual hair follicles, each independently connected to an arrector pili muscle. Humans, mice, deer, cows, horses, pigs, and some dogs typically have this type of hair arrangement, with single, uniform hair follicles, each in communication with other hair follicles through long elastic fibers that extend out through the matrix. The deer was particularly convenient for these studies, because the elastic fibers surrounding the hair follicles in deer are very large and more densely packed than in any of the other mammals we investigated. A sagittal section of deer skin, stained for elastin and immunostained for smooth muscle actin, is shown in Figure 2A. The dark-purple elastic fibers are seen lying parallel to the epithelium and extending from one hair follicle to another. In a single sagittal section, it was impossible to establish origins or attachments because of the wavy nature of the fibers and the offset of the hair follicles. The pili muscle, stained red, lies in close proximity to the hair follicle and again, as was noted above, it was difficult to discern whether the elastic fibers were associated with the pili muscle. With enface sectioning, the elastic fibers in deer skin can usually be viewed in their entirety, connecting follicle to follicle (Figure 2B). The pili muscle can be seen in cross-section aligned along each associated follicle. The elastic fibers are derived from cells lining the follicle and not from other areas of the matrix or the pili muscle. They are not unidirectional but diverge in many directions, connecting to multiple hair follicles. The pili muscle, as illustrated from a section of long-tail macaque monkey skin (Figure 2C), is attached to the matrix just under the basement membrane by elastic fibers that appear to extend from the end of the pili muscle and become embedded in the collagen-rich matrix. The pili muscle extends down the entire length of a hair follicle, where it attaches to the follicle below the sebaceous glands, and along the apex of the follicle, as illustrated with deer skin (Figure 2D). At both sites of attachment, the pili muscle undergoes a transition from smooth muscle to elastic fibers, which anchor the muscle at both ends. This arrangement was observed in almost all animal skins that we investigated.



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Figure 2

Animal skin with single primary hair follicles connected to erector pili muscles. (A) Sagittal section of deer skin showing heavy purple elastic fibers and associated pili muscle (red). (B) Enface section of deer skin showing heavy elastic fibers connecting directly from one hair follicle to another. (C) Sagittal section of long-tail macaque monkey skin showing the pili muscle attachment to the matrix just under the epithelium via elastic fibers. (D) Sagittal section of deer skin illustrating the attachment of the pili muscle to the apex of the hair follicle by elastic fibers. (E) Enface section of macaque monkey skin showing the elastic fiber attachment to a group of three hair follicles. (F) Enface section of opossum skin showing the fine, sparse elastic fibers connecting hair follicles. Hart's elastic stain followed by immunostain for smooth muscle (A,B), counterstained with tartrazine (D,F) and van Gieson's (C,E). Magnification x400 (B,C,D,E), x165 (F), x65 (A). E, elastin; HF, hair follicle; PM, pili muscle.

 
We investigated skin from three non-human primates. The hair follicle arrangement was similar to that of other animals, except that the follicles tended to be isolated in groups of two or three, as illustrated for a macaque monkey (Figure 2E). Each primary follicle was tightly attached to the adjoining follicle with multiple elastic fibers. Despite their being grouped, each follicle maintained its own pili muscle. Elastic fibers were associated solely with the hair follicles and extended into the dermis only to the depth of the apex of the hair follicle. In some animals, such as the opossum, the hair follicles were widely dispersed and the skin showed a paucity of very fine, wispy elastic fibers (Figure 2F). Even though they possessed a much poorer elastic fiber network than seen in most animals, each hair follicle was nonetheless interconnected by these fibers.

We also examined several samples of human skin from different anatomical areas and from subjects of varying ages. Because the samples from older subjects had been exposed to UV irradiation, the solar elastotic masses of elastin in these samples prevented us from determining any individual elastic fiber interactions. One sample, from an 8-month-old subject, showed no pathology and was used for these studies. It was evident that human skin elastic fiber orientation was different in many respects from that of the other animals that we investigated. Elastic fibers were not confined to the upper dermis as observed with most animals but appeared uniformly distributed throughout the entire dermis, as shown in a sagittal section (Figure 3A). Although a few of these fibers were short and appeared fragmented, most were long, relatively straight, and parallel to the epithelium. If the same skin was sectioned in cross-section, the fibers that all appeared to be very short were actually cross-sections of elastic fibers and again illustrate how straight and aligned the fibers were (Figure 3B). This is contrasted to a sagittal section of adult skin showing significant elastosis and irregular elastic fibers (Figure 3C). When viewed enface, the juvenile skin showed elastic fibers associated with a hair follicle in a manner similar to other animals (Figure 3D). Hair follicles were relativity far apart, and it was not possible to obtain a section containing several follicles. Although some elastic fibers could be observed surrounding a single hair follicle and appeared to be derived from that follicle, we were unable to establish the hair follicle as the main source of the elastic fibers observed throughout the dermis in human skin.



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Figure 3

Elastic fibers in the skin of primates and pigs. (A) Sagittal section of 8-month-old human skin illustrating the long elastic fibers present throughout the depth of the dermis. (B) Same section of human skin in cross-section showing the fragmented appearance of the elastic fibers. (C) Sagittal section of and adult human skin illustrating moderate solar elastosis. (D) Enface section of 8-month-old human skin demonstrating the association of the elastic fibers with a hair follicle. (E) Sagittal section of pig skin section showing the typical perpendicular orientation of elastic fibers in the upper dermis. (F) Enface section of pig skin showing the typical scattered elastic fibers as they appear throughout the entire dermis. (G) Sagittal section of pig skin showing the virtual absence of elastic fibers associated with the hair follicle. Sections stained with Hart's elastic stain and counterstained with tartrazine (A,D,F) and van Gieson stain (B,C,E,G). Magnification x200 (E,F), x100 (C,D,G), x65 (A,B). EP, epithelium; HF, hair follicle.

 
Skin sections from the back and belly of pigs were compared and were essentially the same in terms of matrix histology. Fine elastic fibers projected perpendicularly for ~50 µm from the upper dermis to the keratinocytes (Figure 3E). Below this area, elastic fibers were uniformly found throughout the entire dermis but did not necessarily flow parallel to the surface (Figure 3F). The elastic fibers did not present as long fibers or align in organized sheets as was observed with human skin. Unlike other animals investigated, with the exception of human, the majority of the elastic fibers in pig skin did not appear to originate from cells lining hair follicles and did not show the normal network of elastic fibers surrounding the follicle in the upper dermis (Figure 3G). There was also an absence of heavy elastin fibers around the apex of the hair follicle, with only fine, short elastic fibers evident. There was no evidence of the attachment or even the presence of an arrector pili muscle in these samples.

Multiple (Primary and Secondary) Hair Follicles
Wool-bearing animals and animals with fine fur have two or more dissimilar types of hair follicles. Included in this group are the rabbit, sheep, fox, squirrel, raccoon, some dogs, and many other mammals. Multiple-follicle skin is illustrated with Gomori's trichrome staining of a section of rabbit skin showing the distinctive arrangement between two different types of hair follicles (Figure 4A). The large-diameter primary hair follicle is partially encircled by clusters of smaller secondary follicles representing the wool hair of these animals. The pili muscle extends down through the matrix and connects only to the primary hair follicle. The attachment is made through elastic fibers in the same manner as illustrated previously (Figure 2D). Virtually all of the elastic fibers in the upper half of the dermis are derived from the primary follicle and extend out and enclose the bundles of secondary hair follicles as illustrated in an en face section (Figure 4B). Sections from deeper in the rabbit dermis indicate that the secondary follicles are interconnected at the apex by fine elastic fibers, which tie into the main follicle that is surrounded by heavy elastin fibers embedded in a collagen-rich matrix (Figure 4C).



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Figure 4

Elastic fibers in skin with a primary hair follicle and bundles of fine secondary wool follicles. (A) Enface section of rabbit skin illustrating the arrangement of groups of secondary hair follicles surrounding a primary hair follicle. (B) Enface section of rabbit skin stained for elastin showing the major source of the elastic fibers arising from the primary hair follicle, which then encompasses the bundles of wool follicles. (C) Enface section of rabbit skin illustrating the communication between the primary hair follicle and the secondary wool follicles through elastic fibers arising from the apex of these structures. (D,E) Enface sections of sheep skin showing the arrangement of long, thick elastic fibers extending between rows and surrounding wool hair follicles. The elastic fibers arise from primary follicles located at the junctions of the wool follicle bundles. (F) Sagittal section of a primary hair follicle in sheep skin showing the production of elastic fibers along the length of the follicle. (G) An enface section through the same sheep skin illustrating how the primary follicle is situated at the intersection of secondary wool follicles and generates elastic fibers that surround the bundles of smaller follicles. (H,I) Enface sections of fox skin showing the primary follicle associated with three groups of secondary wool follicles and interconnected by elastic fibers. The pili muscle goes between the secondary follicles and attaches only to the primary hair follicle. (J) Enface section of raccoon skin illustrating the association of the primary follicle with a single group of secondary follicles and when sectioned deeper in the dermis (K), we found that only the primary follicle was attached to the pili muscle. (L) Enface section through squirrel skin illustrating the interconnection between primary follicles and elastic fibers; and on higher magnification (M), the elastic fibers can be seen emanating in all directions from the follicle. Magnification x400 (B,C,F,I,M), x200 (J,K), x100 (E,H,L), x65 (A,D,G). E, elastin; HF, hair follicle; PM, pili muscle.

 
The elastic fiber array surrounding the hair follicles in sheep skin is very similar to that of the rabbit. As seen in low power (Figure 4D), clusters of secondary follicles are arranged as bundles that are encompassed by heavy bands of elastic fibers. At higher magnification, these bands are seen to be composed of long, thick elastic fibers that reach the entire distance between the clusters of secondary follicles (Figure 4E). The origin of the elastin fibers appears to be the primary follicles located at the intersection of the smaller hair bundles as seen in sagittal section (Figure 4F) and enface (Figure 4G). Very fine elastic fibers emanate near the bottom of the secondary follicles and appeare to interconnect each small follicle with the primary follicle, as is observed with rabbit skin. The pili muscle is connected only to the primary hair follicle.

The skin of fox contains three distinct sizes of hair follicles, as illustrated in Figure 4H. Elastic fibers interconnect the small secondary follicle bundles and tie into a larger follicle at the head of each of these bundles (Figure 4I) This follicle is in turn connected through larger elastic fibers to the primary hair follicle. Only the primary follicle is attached through elastic fibers to the pili muscle (Figure 4H).

The elastin arrangement in the skin of the raccoon is similar to that in fox skin, with a primary hair follicle bound on one or two sides by a bundle of smaller secondary follicles (Figure 4J). Each secondary follicle is surrounded by fine elastic fibers that connect to the primary follicle. The primary follicles extends deeper into the dermis than the secondary follicles and, when sectioned below these smaller follicles, it can be seen that only the primary follicle is linked directly to the large pili muscle through elastic fibers (Figure 4K).

The skin from squirrels also has more than one type of hair follicle. The elastin aspect of the dermis in the squirrel is very shallow, inasmuch as the hair follicles penetrated less than one-fifth of the depth of the skin. Most of the elastic fibers are concentrated in the lower half of the primary follicle and, when viewed enface, appear as a mass of very fine elastic fibers extending in all directions to contact other follicles (Figure 4L). When viewed at higher power, the elastic fibers were all found to originate from the primary hair follicle (Figure 4M).

Hair Follicles without Pili Muscle Regulation
We investigated hair follicles at sites where hair movement might not be under smooth muscle–elastic fiber control, such as a mouse or rabbit ear where the skin is tightly affixed to the cartilage matrix and the whole ear moves, but perhaps not the hair independently. Figure 5A illustrates an enface section of a hamster ear stained for elastin, showing the hair follicles and associated sebaceous glands. Regardless of the orientation of different sections, we found no elastic fibers associated with the hair follicles. The same observation was made for mouse ear skin. In both instances, almost all the elastin present in the ear was part of the elastic cartilage. However, this observation was not consistent with regard to the rat or rabbit ear, where at least some of the hair follicles were surrounded by the normal elastic fiber network (Figure 5B). In the rat, long elastic fibers extended from some hair follicles to connect with other follicles. Another site investigated was the muzzle, or cheek area, where the large, stiff tactile hair (vibrissae) stand out from other hair. A whisker hair follicle of a mouse stained for elastic fibers is shown in sagittal section in Figure 5C. No visible elastic fiber network was observed adjoining the hair follicle, and it appeared that there was no pili muscle associated with the tactile hair follicle. Enface sections also confirmed the paucity of elastic fibers and showed the follicle to be embedded in a matrix rich in skeletal muscle (Figure 5D). It appeared that small, thin elastic fibers were present in the region immediately surrounding the hair shaft, as shown by the arrow in Figure 5D. The role of these small, fine fibers was not evident.



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Figure 5

Hair follicles without significant elastic fiber–smooth muscle connections. (A) Enface section of hamster ear showing no elastic fibers associated with the hair follicles. (B) Enface section of rat ear illustrating the isolated follicles with associated elastic fibers. (C) Sagittal section of mouse skin illustrating the absence of elastic fibers associated with the whisker (tactile) hair follicle. (D) Enface section of a mouse whisker hair follicle showing a matrix rich in skeletal muscle without visible elastic fibers. (E) Sagittal section of deer skin during the telogen stage of the hair cycle illustrating the absence of elastic fibers in the inferior region. (F) Sagittal section of macaque monkey skin during anagen illustrating the absence of elastic fibers in the inferior region of the hair follicle below the point of attachment of the pili muscle. Magnification x200 (A), x150 (B), x100 (C,D,E,F). E, elastin; HF, hair follicle; IR, inferior region; PM, pili muscle.

 
Elastic Fibers in Relation to the Life Cycle of Hair
Figure 5E is a representative picture of deer skin showing a follicle during the telogen stage of the hair cycle. The hair follicle was terminated just below the level of pili muscle attachment. No elastic fibers were evident below this point in the area that had contained the inferior region of the follicle. A mature anagen stage in macaque monkey skin (Figure 5F) shows the absence of elastic fibers associated with the inferior region of the follicle that has extended down into the lower dermis. Elastic fibers appeared to concentrate just below the area of the pili attachment, and no elastic fibers were ever observed below this point in the inferior region. This observation was consistent for all animals we investigated except for pig and human.


    Discussion
 Top
 Summary
 Introduction
 Materials and Methods
 Results
 Discussion
 Literature Cited
 
The study of avian skin has a long history, starting in the 16th century, and the groundwork for our present knowledge was established by Malpighi a century later (Adelmann 1966Go). These early studies, as well as more recent studies into the mid-1900s, were directed as much toward feather development as toward the skin per se. Consequently, we probably know more about the relationship between the skin and feathers in the avian species than we do about the relationship between the hair and skin in any other species. These very descriptive studies laid the foundation for the definition of skin structures as well as the terminology used for avian skin. In 1972, the US Department of Agriculture, in cooperation with Michigan State University, completed a remarkable study on avian anatomy that resulted in a two-part volume on the integument (Lucas and Stettenheim 1972Go). This beautifully illustrated work brings together all the previous investigations and extends their observations with a detailed portrayal of avian skin and feather development. In avian skin, there are no arrector pili muscles attached to individual feather follicles. This function is accomplished by the feather muscles, which are richly supplied with nerves regulated by the autonomic nervous system. The feather muscles have been classified into three types of smooth muscle according to function: (a) the arrector muscle, which is attached at one end to the neck of one feather follicle and at the other end to the base of a follicle anterior to it; (b) the depressor muscles, which pass from the neck of one feather follicle to the base of another follicle posterior to it; and (c) repressor muscles, which that pass from the neck of one follicle to the neck of another follicle and draw the feathers together with no depression or erection. When the muscles are stimulated, the contraction of the arrector muscle acts like a fulcrum from the lower end of the follicle and pulls the adjacent feather upright. As the feather attains an erect position, the depressor muscle elongates passively. Contraction of the depressor muscles brings the feathers back close to the body. It is obvious that elastic fibers play a major role in this process. They are required for the attachment of the muscle to the follicle and undoubtedly have a major role in stretch and recoil to allow uniform movement of the feathers as they move and return to the proper position.

Avian skin is an exaggerated example of how elastic fibers in the skin have a primary role in the movement of a skin covering. They perform this function by connecting feather follicles to large smooth muscle bundles with an elastic fiber linkage. For feathers some distance apart, a massive segmented smooth muscle–elastic fiber cable spans the distance and connects the follicle at both ends with elastic fibers. In our study we found no evidence of additional, ordered or randomly placed, elastic fibers distributed throughout the avian skin that might contribute to skin elasticity. It is quite possible, however, that the smooth muscle–elastin network, which covers the entire skin area, provides a degree of stretch and recoil to the skin, with the feather follicles performing the role of anchor points.

The elastic fibers in the skin of animals with hair perform essentially the same function as the elastic fibers found in avian skin. However, the arrangement has been modified to meet the lesser requirements for hair movement. A single, slender arrector pili muscle has replaced the substantial arrector, repressor, and depressor muscles seen in avian skin. The forces required to pull a hair upright are much lower than those required to raise and lower and/or maintain a feather in place during flight. In both instances, however, an elaborate elastic fiber network surrounding the follicle is involved in the attachment of the muscles. Elastic fibers also emanate from the sub-basement membrane end of the pili muscle in haired animals to anchor the pili muscle to the matrix, whereas in avian species, the muscle connects at each end to adjacent feather follicles through this elastin network.

The alternating smooth muscle bundle–elastic fiber bundle found in avian species, which connects feather follicles that are far removed from each other, does not seem to have a counterpart in haired animals. In animals with hair, with a few possible exceptions, each hair follicle is connected to other follicles directly, with numerous elastic fibers originating at many sites up and down the hair follicle. Smooth muscle does not appear to have a role in this process. The physical site or other proteins involved in the elastic fiber attachment to the follicular or smooth muscle cells is unknown.

For animals with wool or fur, the system has been efficiently designed such that only one pili muscle is required to stimulate the adjacent bundles of smaller secondary hair follicles. This is accomplished through a single primary hair follicle, from which the majority of the elastic fibers originate, and to which the pili muscle is attached. Fine elastic fibers arising at the apex of the secondary follicles connect them to each other and, subsequently, all connect to the primary follicle. In this manner, a contraction or signal carried to the primary follicle by a single pili muscle could be transmitted to the numerous secondary follicles.

The pattern of elastic fibers in the skin of humans suggests a different role, and perhaps cell of origin, than all other animals we investigated. A possible exception is the pig, which appears to have some similarities in location and function. Elastic fibers in human skin are not concentrated in areas of hair follicles but are dispersed throughout the entire dermis in comparable concentrations and distributions.

There is no doubt that individual hair follicles are associated with elastic fibers in much the same manner as in other animals, yet the sheer mass and distribution of most of the elastic fibers suggests other sources of origin, presumably fibroblasts, throughout the dermis. As elastic fibers age and/or are exposed to solar damage, the fibers lose definition and can eventually become an amorphous mass, as observed in Figure 3C. These masses occur throughout the dermis and appear to have no relationship with hair follicles. The difference observed in human skin was not related to the primate order because the three other primate skin representatives we studied maintained the same elastic fiber–hair follicle relationship that we observed in most other animals.

The elastic fiber–hair follicle pattern is not the same for skin on all parts of the animal body. For example, hair on the ear of a mouse and hamster does not appear to have detectable elastic fibers associated with the hair follicles. This observation could be explained by the lack of regulated hair movement on the ears of these animals. The animals move the entire ear but not the individual hairs on the ear. Another example is the tactile hairs (whiskers) that are found on the cheek or muzzle of animals. These follicles are encased in skeletal muscle and are voluntarily moved by the animal. We did not find the typical elastic fiber network at this site.

The hair cycle occurs in three stages: anagen, catagen, and telogen. During anagen, the hair follicle penetrates the dermis, and in some animals, the dermal papilla reaches almost to the carnosus muscle layer. After a period of growth, the hair follicle goes into a resting state or catagen, where the entire lower half (inferior region) of the follicle regresses to a point just below the attachment of the pili muscle. Do elastic fibers grow out from the cells lining the follicle in the inferior region? If this were true, complete removal of the old elastic fiber network would be required and a new system installed with each growth phase of the hair cycle. This possibility does not seem to be the case, because elastin fibers are concentrated just below the area of the pili attachment, and no elastic fibers are observed below this point in the inferior region. This conclusion was reached for all species of animals investigated except human and pig. In human skin, and to a lesser degree, pig skin, the elastic fibers lie as parallel fibers the entire depth of the dermis. This includes the inferior region of the hair follicles and again demonstrates the uncharacteristic nature of human skin, as opposed to the skin of other species.

Another note of interest was the chronological order of appearance of elastic fibers in the dermis of the non-human skin. In chicken skin, the elastic fibers connecting the follicles appeared 2–3 days prior to hatch. At this time, the feathers have developed and the birds hatch fully feathered. In contrast, when we look at mouse skin, in which the animals are born without visible hair, there are no elastic fibers present in the skin of the fetal mice except those associated with blood vessels or the carnosus muscle layer. Dermal elastic fibers emanating from the hair follicles are first evident at ~5 days after birth. This corresponds to the time that hair first appears on the skin surface of these animals.

In summary, our studies indicate that for avians and most mammals, elastic fibers in the skin are predominantly allied with feather or hair follicles and the associated smooth muscle bundles, suggesting that movement or maintaining position of the skin covering is the principal role for elastic fibers in the skin. Hair follicles associated with skeletal muscle do not appear to have a comparable elastic fiber arrangement. The elastic fiber origin and arrangement in human skin is atypical compared with other animals and may have a more prominent role in stretch and recoil and maintenance of skin integrity.


    Footnotes
 
Received for publication July 22, 2004; accepted November 10, 2004


    Literature Cited
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 Summary
 Introduction
 Materials and Methods
 Results
 Discussion
 Literature Cited
 

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