Tracking specific hair cells reveals how stress causes gray hair

Authored by massivesci.com and submitted by dazosan
image for Tracking specific hair cells reveals how stress causes gray hair

It's no surprise that chameleons can change colors to pink, blue, orange, red, and black. These color changes are partly mediated by stress. For example, stress increases dark gray pigmentation of tawny dragon lizards. That same stress and color change relationship also applies to human hair. Hair graying has long been associated with increased stress and aging. But little actual evidence as proven science behind this observation.

A team of scientists from Harvard University have now explained this mystery.

Activation of MeSCs produces fully formed melanocytes, which migrate to the base of the hair follice and make the melanin that colors hair

For hair follicles to grow, they go through three main phases : growth, degeneration and inactivity. The growth phase activates two population of stem cells, one called hair follicle stem cells, or HFSCs, and another called melanocyte stem cells, MeSCs. Activation of HFSCs produces hair follicles. Activation of MeSCs produces fully formed melanocytes, which migrate to the base of the hair follice and make the melanin that colors hair. Melanocytes die and degenerate, and the cycle repeats with a new cohort of melanin-producing cells.

But where in this cycle does stress play a role?

When researchers caused pain-induced stress in rats, it triggered a fight or flight response , which in turn increased production of noradrenaline . Noradrenaline, generally functions to increase action and attention in the mind and body and binds to the surface of MeSCs. This stress effect accelerated the MeSCs growth cycle, pushing the cells to become melanocytes and possibly causing them to migrate elsewhere.

After the end of a cycle of stressed hair follicle growth , remaining MeSCs were also reduced. Interestingly, decreased MeSCs also occur with age . That effect on MeSCs resulted in less mature melanocytes and thus less pigmentation in subsequent hair follicle growth cycles.

After years of empirical evidence, it is exciting to understand the role MeSCs may play in stress and if it contributes to the accelerated ageing process.

Ed.: Originally this article was published with an image of Claire Saffitz as an illustration of someone with gray hair. It was pointed out to me that this is an unfair and hurtful use of a person's appearance. I apologize for the error and have changed the photo to a stock image. -DS

SixPieceNugzz on May 25th, 2020 at 20:15 UTC »

Damn what happened in here?

gatchipatchi on May 25th, 2020 at 18:48 UTC »

EDIT: Found a public access version of the study, with easy to read explanation as well:

https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-019-03949-8

Heres the study the article is based off

"Hyperactivation of sympathetic nerves drives depletion of melanocyte stem cells"

https://www.nature.com/articles/s41586-020-1935-3#ref-CR4

Here we report that, in mice, acute stress leads to hair greying through the fast depletion of melanocyte stem cells. Using a combination of adrenalectomy, denervation, chemogenetics3,4, cell ablation and knockout of the adrenergic receptor specifically in melanocyte stem cells, we find that the stress-induced loss of melanocyte stem cells is independent of immune attack or adrenal stress hormones. Instead, hair greying results from activation of the sympathetic nerves that innervate the melanocyte stem-cell niche.

kjellsson on May 25th, 2020 at 16:57 UTC »

Does removing stress allow pigment-producing cells to return to functionality? In other words is the graying affect permanent?