High-Fat Diets and Obesity May Accelerate Hair Loss and Thinning

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Mice on a high-fat diet (which leads to obesity) experience a depletion of hair follicle stem cells through a cascade of inflammatory signaling, which blocks hair follicle regeneration and leads to hair loss.Â
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This was especially the case with older mice.Â
This article was posted on EurekAlert.org:
Itâs well known that obesity is linked to the development of numerous diseases in humans. However, itâs not fully clear how body organs specifically deteriorate and lose functionality from chronic obesity. In a recent article published in Nature, a group of researchers from Tokyo Medical and Dental University (TMDU) used mouse model experiments to examine how a high-fat diet or genetically induced obesity can affect hair thinning and loss. The authors found that obesity can lead to depletion of hair follicle stem cells (HFSCs) through the induction of certain inflammatory signals, blocking hair follicle regeneration and ultimately resulting in loss of hair follicles.
Normally, HFSCs self-renew every hair follicle cycle. This is part of the process that allows our hair to continuously grow back. As humans age, HFSCs fail to replenish themselves leading to fewer HFSCs and therefore hair thinning. Although  overweight people has higher risk of androgenic alopecia, whether obesity accelerates hair thinning, how and the molecular mechanisms have been largely unknown. The TMDU group aimed to address those qeustions and identified some of the mechanisms.
âHigh-fat diet feeding accelerates hair thinning by depleting HFSCs that replenish mature cells that grow hair, especially in old mice. â Â says lead author of the study Hironobu Morinaga. âWe compared the gene expression in HFSCs between HFD-fed mice and standard diet-fed mice and traced the fate of those HFSCs after their activation. âWe found that those HFSCs in HFD-fed obesed mice change their fate into the skin surface corneocytes or sebocytes that secrete sebum upon their activation. Those mice show faster hair loss and smaller hair follicles along with depletion of HFSCsâ.Â
âEven with HFD feeding in four consecutive days, HFSCs shows increased oxidative stress and the signs of epidermal differentiation.â
âThe gene expression in HFSCs from the high-fatâfed mice indicated the activation of inflammatory cytokine signaling within HFSCsâ describes Emi K. Nishimura, senior author. âThe inflammatory signals in HFSCs strikingly repress Sonic hedgehog signaling that plays crucial role in hair follicle regeneration in HFSCs.
The researchers confirmed the activation of the Sonic hedgehog signaling pathway in this process can rescue the depletion of HFSCs. âThis could prevent the hair loss brought on by the high-fat diet. âsaid Nishimura.
This study provides interesting new insights into the specific cellular fate changes and tissue dysfunction that can occur following a high-fat diet or genetically induced obesity and may open the door for future prevention and treatment of hair thinning as well as for understanding of obesity-related diseases.
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The article, âObesity accelerates hair thinning by stem cell-centric converging mechanisms,â was published in Nature at DOI: 10.1038/s41586-021-03624-x
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JOURNAL
Nature