Grey hair is not your pigment cells dying. They're stuck. And that distinction might be reversible.
Research published in Nature found that grey hair is caused not by the death of pigment stem cells, but by these cells getting physically "stuck" in the wrong compartment of the hair follicle — unable to mature into the melanocytes that produce colour. A separate 2025 study found that luteolin, a plant antioxidant found in celery, broccoli, and carrots, completely reversed greying in mice. The cells are there. The question — again — is what they need to move.
It is the loss of chameleon-like function in melanocyte stem cells that may be responsible for greying. These cells normally travel back and forth between compartments in the hair follicle, switching between stem cell and mature pigment-producing states. When they get stuck, they can't make the protein needed to colour the hair. The cells are not gone. They are jammed.
This series has spent a month establishing a single recurring theme: hair loss is not what it appears to be on the surface. The stem cells that should be growing hair are present even in bald scalp — they're dormant, not dead. The molecular signal they need (Gas6) is suppressed, not absent. The oxygen sensor (HIF-1α) is stressed, not broken.
Grey hair has just joined this pattern.
Melanocytes are the cells that produce the pigment responsible for skin and hair colour. They arise from melanocyte stem cells — McSCs — which sit in a niche near the hair follicle bulge. In healthy, pigmented hair, McSCs travel to the base of the developing hair follicle each growth cycle, where they mature into pigment-producing melanocytes. Research from NYU Langone Health found that the colour-fading process happens when these pigment stem cells get "stuck" inside the hair follicle instead of moving to the zone that produces colour.
"It is the loss of chameleon-like function in melanocyte stem cells that may be responsible for graying and loss of hair color," said Dr. Mayumi Ito, the study's senior investigator. The McSCs are not dying. They are losing the ability to move between compartments — and that movement, not the cells' existence, is what determines whether new hair grows in with colour or without it.
The Mechanism
Why pigment cells and growth cells fail independently.
One of the most clarifying findings in this research is that melanocyte stem cells and hair follicle stem cells — the cells responsible for growth — are different populations that fail on different timelines through different mechanisms. McSCs fail earlier than the hair follicle stem cells responsible for hair growth, leading to hair greying with age. This is why hair can keep growing even while its pigmentation fails — the growth machinery and the colour machinery are running on separate tracks.
McSCs exhibit a distinctive ability to switch between transit-amplifying and stem cell stages — moving between compartments through dedifferentiation, reversibly entering multiple differentiation stages controlled by the local microenvironment. This is unusual: most stem cell systems move in one direction along an established timeline as they mature, never reverting to their original state. McSCs are different — they normally shuttle back and forth, which is what allows the same population to keep producing pigment across many hair growth cycles.
When this back-and-forth movement stops — when the cells get fixed in position — the dedifferentiation that would normally refresh the pigment-producing population doesn't happen. The cells remain present, in the follicle, but locked in a state that cannot produce melanin for the new hair shaft.
A 2025 study published in Nature Cell Biology examined what happens to melanocyte stem cells under cellular stress — and found that stressed McSCs face a fork in the road: they can either lose their stem cell identity entirely (contributing to greying) or, in some cases, become senescent in a way that relates to melanoma risk. The title of the research — "Antagonistic stem cell fates under stress govern decisions between hair greying and melanoma" — frames greying as one outcome of a stress response that the McSC population is navigating.
This connects directly to the oxidative stress cascade this series has covered repeatedly — the same reactive oxygen species that impair HIF-1α signalling, degrade collagen, and feed PIILIF inflammation are part of the cellular stress environment that influences whether McSCs maintain their mobile, pigment-producing function or lose it.
A 2025 study by scientists at Nagoya University in Japan showed that luteolin — a naturally occurring antioxidant found in vegetables such as celery, broccoli, carrots, onions, and peppers — completely reversed greying in mice. Luteolin is a flavonoid with well-documented antioxidant activity, working by neutralising reactive oxygen species in the same way that the green tea EGCG and rosemary carnosic acid in topical botanical formulations work at the scalp surface.
The mouse result is early — translation to humans is not established, and "completely reversed" in a mouse model does not predict the same outcome in human hair, which has a different McSC biology and a much longer hair cycle. But the mechanistic logic is consistent with everything else this series has covered: an antioxidant compound addressing the oxidative stress component of a stem cell dysfunction that was previously assumed to be simple cell loss.
What This Means Practically
What changes — and what doesn't, yet.
This research is genuinely early. There is no approved treatment, topical or oral, that reverses grey hair in humans based on this mechanism. The luteolin mouse study is a single early-stage finding, not a clinical trial, and mouse melanocyte biology differs from human biology in ways that frequently prevent direct translation. If a product claims to reverse grey hair based on this research, that claim is ahead of the evidence — go verify any specific product claim independently before trusting it.
What the research does change is the conceptual framework — in the same way the UVA bald scalp stem cell finding changed the framework for hair loss. Grey hair has been understood as a simple depletion story: pigment cells run out, hair goes grey, the process is one-directional and irreversible. The mechanism research suggests a more nuanced picture: a population of cells that becomes immobilised under conditions that may include oxidative stress, with the cells themselves still present.
Where this fits in the larger picture.
This series has now covered three separate stem cell populations relevant to hair: the bulge stem cells that drive hair growth (UVA, present even in bald scalp), the upper follicle stem cells that may migrate to repopulate the bulge, and now the melanocyte stem cells that determine colour — each with a distinct biology, a distinct failure mechanism, and a distinct relationship to oxidative stress and cellular signalling.
The common thread across all three is not a treatment claim. It is a reframe: in each case, research that initially looked like simple cell loss turned out to be more specific — cells present but dormant, present but signal-deprived, present but immobilised. Whether or not a treatment for grey hair reversal in humans emerges from this research — and the honest answer is that we don't know yet — the antioxidant botanical compounds already in daily use (green tea EGCG, rosemary carnosic acid) are addressing the oxidative stress component that this and other stem cell research keeps identifying as relevant.
This is not a claim that the Laritelle ritual reverses grey hair. It is an honest observation that the mechanism research keeps pointing toward the same handful of biological levers — oxidative stress, cellular signalling, stem cell mobility — that the daily botanical ritual was formulated around for entirely different reasons, years before this research existed.
The research is early. The mechanism rhymes with everything else.
The antioxidant foundation — for the mechanisms we understand.
Green tea EGCG and rosemary carnosic acid address oxidative stress at the scalp surface — the same pathway emerging research keeps identifying across multiple stem cell populations in the follicle.
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