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Baldness Battle, Fought in the Follicle - NYTimes.com
Page 1 of 3
July 28, 2012
A War on Baldness, Fought in the
Follicle
By ANNE EISENBERG
FEW things are as likely to strike fear in the hearts of men as the sight of a receding hairline in
the bathroom mirror. Farewell, sweet youth; hello, male pattern baldness.
Hair follicles are the culprits in this unfortunate turn of events. These tiny holes on the scalp
shrink over time, depending on genetics and the presence of testosterone, producing not the
lush locks of youth but rather hair that gradually thins into peach fuzz.
Now a doctor who has spent several decades learning the treacherous ways of the follicle may
have discovered a new way to put the brakes on the process.
Dr. George Cotsarelis, a professor and head of dermatology at the Perelman School of Medicine
of the University of Pennsylvania, and colleagues have identified a molecule that inhibits hair
growth in the follicle. The research team also pinpointed the receptor on the cell where the deed
is done, making it a target for possible future therapies for male pattern baldness.
Treatments focusing on this specific receptor are already in the pipeline, developed by
pharmaceutical companies to treat illnesses related to allergies, said Dr. Luis Garza, lead author
of the paper announcing the discovery, which appeared in Science Translational Medicine.
“The receptor is already a target for other diseases,” he said. “The exciting aspect is that we can
try to use those drugs now being developed to treat male pattern baldness.” About 10 drugs that
take aim at the receptor are going through clinical trials to treat allergic diseases, he said.
Dr. Garza, who joined Dr. Cotsarelis’s lab six years ago and worked with him on problems of
male pattern baldness, is now an assistant professor in the dermatology department at the
http://www.nytimes.com/2012/07/29/business/baldness-battle-fought-in-the-follicle.html?... 07/30/2012
Baldness Battle, Fought in the Follicle - NYTimes.com
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Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine.
Desmond J. Tobin, a professor of cell biology and director of the Center for Skin Sciences at the
University of Bradford in England, said he welcomed the discovery.
“We are definitely in need of a new way to tackle this problem,” Dr.Tobin said.
Male pattern baldness is the most common form of hair loss in men. Current treatments
include hair transplants and two medications approved by the Food and Drug Administration
— one a lotion containing minoxidil, the second a pill containing finasteride.
The discovery isn’t likely to help men who are already bald. “It would be too much to turn the
clock back and reverse very extensive hair loss,” Dr. Tobin said.
But should a treatment based on the discovery come to pass, it could be significant for men who
are in the early stages of balding. “You could probably slow the hairs from getting so fine and
thin in the first place,” he said. “That would be a breakthrough.”
The miniaturized hairs of balding men remain on the scalp for a few days to a few weeks, Dr.
Tobin said. In contrast, normal scalp hairs typically remain for at least three years. “If you could
release the hairs to grow more normally in the scalp, you’d let the hair follicles go on for a bit
longer,” he said. “They would produce visible, cosmetically attractive hair.”
Dr. Cheng Ming Chuong, a professor of pathology at the Keck School of Medicine at the
University of Southern California, also was enthusiastic about the discovery. “We in the field
are excited to see new progress,” he said. “Once you know the molecules that do the work,
scientists can design different compounds to deal with the problem.”
Dr. Cotsarelis, who describes himself as “enamored with the hair follicle,” has been hard at
work on balding scalps since he identified hair follicle stem cells in mice in 1990, when he was a
postdoctoral fellow. “We were able to show that when we isolated the cells and injected them
into another mouse,” he said, “the mouse made new hair follicles.”
In the most recent work, he and his team studied the balding and nonbalding areas of men’s
scalps. They did detailed genetic analysis of the cells, pinpointing the molecule, Prostaglandin
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Baldness Battle, Fought in the Follicle - NYTimes.com
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D2, that was found at higher levels in the bald scalps of men. Dr. Cotsarelis and Dr. Garza are
co-inventors on a patent owned by the University of Pennsylvania describing the pathway by
which the prostaglandin is inhibited at the receptor.
ALSO at work on the problem of male pattern baldness is Valerie Horsley, an assistant
professor of molecular, cellular and developmental biology at Yale. She is investigating how fat
cells in the skin of mice send signals to hair follicles.
“Our work shows that fat cells can induce hair growth in mice,” she said. She is now at work on
the molecular mechanism by which these cells act.
Dr. Cotsarelis, meanwhile, is working on another vexing problem. “Now we need to look at
women who are losing their hair,” he said.
E-mail: [email protected].
http://www.nytimes.com/2012/07/29/business/baldness-battle-fought-in-the-follicle.html?... 07/30/2012