The major epidermal integrins are alpha3beta1 and hemidesmosome-specific alpha6beta4; both share laminin 5 as ligand. Keratinocyte culture studies implicate both integrins in adhesion, proliferation, and stem cell maintenance and suggest unique roles for alphabeta1 integrins in migration and terminal differentiation. In mice, however, whereas ablation of alpha6 or beta4 results in loss of hemidesmosomes, epidermal polarity, and basement membrane (BM) attachment, ablation of alpha3 only generates microblistering due to localized internal shearing of BM. Using conditional knockout technology to ablate beta1 in skin epithelium, we have uncovered biological roles for alphabeta1 integrins not predicted from either the alpha3 knockout or from in vitro studies. In contrast to alpha3 null mice, beta1 mutant mice exhibit severe skin blistering and hair defects, accompanied by massive failure of BM assembly/organization, hemidesmosome instability, and a failure of hair follicle keratinocytes to remodel BM and invaginate into the dermis. Although epidermal proliferation is impaired, a spatial and temporal program of terminal differentiation is executed. These results indicate that beta1's minor partners in skin are important, and together, alphabeta1 integrins are required not only for extracellular matrix assembly but also for BM formation. This, in turn, is required for hemidesmosome stability, epidermal proliferation, and hair follicle morphogenesis. However, beta1 downregulation does not provide the trigger to terminally differentiate.