Title: Oxford Hair Foundation Genetics of Scalp Disorders
1Oxford Hair FoundationGenetics of Scalp
Disorders
- Thomas L. Dawson, Jr., Ph.D.
2What is Dandruff?
3Dandruff Physiology
Dandruff flakes are the opposite of dry skin
Leg skin, 21,600X
Dandruff, 27,000X
4Dandruff Physiology
Dandruff scalp
Non-Dandruff
5Dandruff Physiology
Non-Dandruff
Dandruff scalp
75K mag.
94 K mag.
6What is dandruff summary
- Dandruff is a less severe form of seborrheic
dermatitis - Dandruff is the opposite of dry skin
- excess lipids
- no desmosomes
7Dandruff Microbiology
- Current hypotheses implicate microorganisms
infecting the scalp, predominantly Malassezia
fungi - Malassezia fungus is found on all scalps, but
- Malassezia actually consists of at least ten
species,
M. furfur M. pachydermatis M. sympodialis M.
globosa M. obtusa
M. slooffiae M. restricta M. dermatis M. japonica
M. equi
8So then, Who is really there?
9Genomics I - Application of Genetic Tools to
Dandruff Aetiology
- M. furfur or P. ovale is frequently cited as the
dandruff causal organism, based on culture
methods - Genomics-based techniques identify the actual
culprits, M. restricta and M. globosa
10Why Genomic Speciation?
No bias on culture!
11Malassezia Species on Human Scalp
ASFS lt10 (N24)
ASFS gt24 (N46)
Frequency ( of N)
No fungi detected
12So, whos the culprit?
13Mechanism
How do Malassezia restricta and globosa cause
dandruff?
14Hyper-Proliferation Caused by Inflammation
Sebaceous
15- Oleic acid, alone, can induce dandruff in human
subjects
1
Flaking
0
-
1
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
Days Treatment
16Which Malassezia Species Causes Dandruff?
Malassezia globosa is mostly likely the causative
agent based on prevalence activity
17Genomics II - Cloning of the M. globosa Lipase
H2N-GRGGSST DQPVANPYNT KEISLAAGLV QQTYCDSTEN
GLKIGDSELL YTMGEGYARQ RVNIYHSPSL
GIAVAIEGTN LFSLNSDLHD AKFWQEDPNE RYIQYYPKGT
KLMHGFQQAY NDLMDDIFTA VKKYKKEKNE
KRVTVIGHSL GAAMGLLCAM DIELRMDGGL
YKTYLFGLPR LGNPTFASFV DQKIGDKFHS IINGRDWVPT
VPPRALGYQH PSDYVWIYPG NSTSAKLYPG
QENVHGILTV AR
Yellow peptide sequence Red - conserved
active site Pink peptide sequence
18Genomics III - The Future
Comparative Whole-genome Analysis
19Some sequenced fungal genomes
Saccharomyces cerevisiae the quintessential
fungus
20Some sequenced fungal genomes
Ustilago maydis - Malassezias near neighbour
21Some sequenced fungal genomes
- Candida albicansa - common human pathogen
22Some sequenced fungal genomes
- Cryptococcus neoformans - another common human
pathogen
23The Whitehead Initiative!
7 Fungal Genomes Sequenced 44 genomes proposed
to be sequenced
24The problem
- Fungal infections and fungal-related mortality is
on the rise - Current anti-fungal therapies essentially rely on
four gene targets
25Progress from functional genomics
- Genomics research has defined new families of
essential genes - Genomics research has developed new models to
much more rapidly assess the effects of
disruption of these essential targets
26Progress from functional genomics
- Now, we have gone from four known targets to
hundreds of targets in thousands of genes - The trick now becomes what are the best of
these targets, and how do we find new materials?
27Progress from functional genomics
- New target identification
- Is the proposed target present in the genome?
- Is the target relevant to the disease/disorder?
- Is the target testable in a validated assay?
- Is it expressed in situ?
28On the horizon
- Fusion of human and fungal genome data, to
decipher the communication between host and
fungus - Replace anti-fungal technology with
normalization technology!
29The Team
- PG
- Joe Kaczvinsky
- Charlie Saunders
- Tina Gemmer
- Yvonne DeAngelis
- Erin MacDonald
- Meredith Leland
- Kevin Johnstone
- Mariann Jenkins
- Collaborators
- Aditya Gupta, MD, PhD, MediProbe Labs, Canada
- Teun Boekhout, PhD, The CBS, The Netherlands
- Jim Kronstad, PhD, Univ. British Columbia
- George Smulian, Univ. Cincinnati, USA
- Bo Yuan, Ohio State, USA
- Pamela Troller, Augustana College, USA
30Thank You