Melanocyte

The Melanocyte & the Origin of Melasma

Your skin's pigment is its built-in sunscreen. Melasma is that same protection working overtime.

What is a melanocyte, and where is it?

The melanocyte is the cell that makes your skin's pigment. It lives in the deepest layer of the epidermis — the stratum basale.

Skin layers and the location of the melanocyte in the stratum basale
The melanocyte lives only in the stratum basale.
5–10%of basal cells are melanocytes
~36keratinocytes fed by each melanocyte
1layer — it stays in the stratum basale

Although melanocytes are few in number, each one feeds pigment to about 36 surrounding keratinocytes through its branches, called dendrites. Together, this group is known as the "epidermal melanin unit."

What is a keratinocyte?

Keratinocytes are the most abundant cells in the epidermis — about 90–95% of it. They build the skin barrier and slowly rise toward the surface. They don't make pigment themselves; they receive it from the melanocyte.

Melanin is your skin's natural sunscreen

Melanin isn't just color — it's protection. Inside each skin cell, melanin gathers into tiny "caps" that sit over the cell's nucleus like a parasol, absorbing incoming UV before it can damage the DNA. The more sun the skin senses, the more melanin it makes. That's exactly why we tan.

Melanin forms protective caps over the cell nucleus, absorbing UV and shielding DNA
Melanin caps absorb UV and shield the cell's DNA — the skin's own sunscreen.
The key idea

Melasma is your skin's natural sunscreen working overtime.

The melanin in a melasma patch is the very same pigment that protects you from the sun — the skin is simply making too much of it, in the wrong places.

How melasma forms

Pigment, called melanin, is made inside the melanocyte in tiny packets called melanosomes. These travel outward and are delivered to the keratinocytes. When the process speeds up too much, excess pigment builds up — and that becomes the visible patch of melasma.

Melanosomes transferring from the melanocyte to keratinocytes
Melanosomes travel along the dendrites and transfer into the keratinocytes.
1
Production

The melanocyte makes melanin inside melanosomes.

2
Transport

Melanosomes move along the dendrites toward the tips.

3
Transfer

Pigment passes into the ~36 neighboring keratinocytes.

4
Melasma

Accumulated excess pigment shows up as visible patches.

In one sentence

Melasma isn't dirt or damage — it's your skin's own sun protection, made in excess and clustered into visible patches.


What activates the melanocyte to produce melanin?

There's no single cause. Several pathways — or "signals" — can switch the melanocyte on. In pregnancy melasma, 5 to 8 of these typically combine at once.

The 9 pathways that activate the melanocyte in pregnancy melasma
The nine pathways, ranked by relative weight.

The pathways, ranked

1

MC1R / α-MSH / cAMP / MITF sun-driven
23%
2

Estrogen / Progesterone hormonal
21%
3

PAR-2 Activation pigment transfer
11%
4

High Baseline Tyrosinase + Genetic
10%
5

Inflammatory Cytokine Signaling
10%
6

Stress / Cortisol Pathway
8%
7

Basement Membrane Disruption (MMP-2/9)
7%
8

AhR Pathway (Pollution, PM2.5)
6%
9

Diet (Gut-Skin Axis) + Visible Light / OPN3
4%
Key point

The top two pathways — sun (MC1R) and hormones — together account for 44% of the total drive. That's why pregnancy melasma worsens so sharply with sun exposure.

Pathway 1 — The sun route (MC1R → MITF)

When UV light damages a keratinocyte, a chain reaction reaches the melanocyte and ends in pigment. Step by step:

UV photon damages keratinocyte DNA; keratinocyte releases alpha-MSH
Step 1

UV hits the skin

A UV photon damages the keratinocyte's DNA. In response, it releases a signal called α-MSH.

alpha-MSH binds MC1R on the melanocyte
Step 2

α-MSH binds MC1R

The signal travels to the melanocyte and locks onto its MC1R receptor on the surface.

cAMP rises and activates PKA inside the melanocyte
Step 3

cAMP & PKA fire up

MC1R switches on adenylyl cyclase; cAMP rises inside the cell and activates the enzyme PKA.

PKA activates CREB which switches on MITF
Step 4

MITF is switched on

PKA activates CREB, which switches on MITF — the master switch for pigment production.

MITF activates tyrosinase, TRP-1 and TRP-2 genes
Step 5

Pigment genes turn on

MITF enters the nucleus and activates the genes for tyrosinase, TRP-1 and TRP-2 — the pigment-building enzymes.

Tyrosinase produces melanin inside melanosomes
Step 6

Melanin is made

Tyrosinase builds melanin inside melanosomes, which darken and pass to the keratinocytes.

Pathway 2 — The hormonal route (pregnancy)

Pregnancy hormones reach the same master switch by a different door. Step by step:

Pregnancy surge of estrogen and progesterone
Step 1

Hormones surge

During pregnancy, the placenta drives estrogen and progesterone 10–100× above normal.

Estrogen binds ER-alpha/ER-beta; progesterone binds PR
Step 2

Hormones bind receptors

Estrogen binds the ERα/ERβ receptors and progesterone binds PR on the melanocyte.

Hormone-receptor complexes enter the nucleus
Step 3

Into the nucleus

The hormone-receptor complexes move into the nucleus and begin activating gene transcription.

Complexes activate MITF, the master regulator
Step 4

Same master switch: MITF

They activate MITF — the exact same pigment master switch the sun pathway uses.

Tyrosinase makes excess melanin, becoming visible melasma
Step 5

Excess melanin → melasma

MITF ramps up tyrosinase, the melanocyte makes excess melanin, and it transfers to keratinocytes as visible melasma.

Takeaway

Melasma is protection in overdrive. The aim isn't to fight your skin's defense — it's to calm the overreaction and take the pressure off it, above all by shielding the skin from the sun that drives it.