| Literature DB >> 24159392 |
Ruža Pandel1, Borut Poljšak, Aleksandar Godic, Raja Dahmane.
Abstract
Photoaging of the skin depends primarily on the degree of ultraviolet radiation (UVR) and on an amount of melanin in the skin (skin phototype). In addition to direct or indirect DNA damage, UVR activates cell surface receptors of keratinocytes and fibroblasts in the skin, which leads to a breakdown of collagen in the extracellular matrix and a shutdown of new collagen synthesis. It is hypothesized that dermal collagen breakdown is followed by imperfect repair that yields a deficit in the structural integrity of the skin, formation of a solar scar, and ultimately clinically visible skin atrophy and wrinkles. Many studies confirmed that acute exposure of human skin to UVR leads to oxidation of cellular biomolecules that could be prevented by prior antioxidant treatment and to depletion of endogenous antioxidants. Skin has a network of all major endogenous enzymatic and nonenzymatic protective antioxidants, but their role in protecting cells against oxidative damage generated by UV radiation has not been elucidated. It seems that skin's antioxidative defence is also influenced by vitamins and nutritive factors and that combination of different antioxidants simultaneously provides synergistic effect.Entities:
Year: 2013 PMID: 24159392 PMCID: PMC3789494 DOI: 10.1155/2013/930164
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ISRN Dermatol ISSN: 2090-4592
Figure 1DermaView skin analyser accentuates areas of sun-damaged skin of the face.
Exogenous antioxidants with photoprotective or damage protective effects.
| Antioxidants | Outcome of the study | Study |
|---|---|---|
| Ascorbic acid | Topical vitamin C 5% cream applied for six months led to clinical improvement in the appearance of photoaged skin | |
| Topical vitamin C stimulates the collagen-producing activity of the dermis | ||
| Magnesium ascorbyl phosphate administration immediately after exposure in hairless mice significantly delayed skin tumor formation and hyperplasia induced by chronic exposure to UV radiation | Elmore, 2005 [ | |
| Ascorbic acid was a photoprotectant when applied to mice and pig skin before exposure to ultraviolet (UV) radiation | Elmore, 2005 [ | |
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| Vitamin E | UV-induced vitamin E depletion | Packer and Valacchi, 2002 [ |
| The interaction of vitamin E with the eicosanoid system may result in an anti-inflammatory effect and thereby complement the photoprotective effects of other antioxidants in the skin | Boelsma et al., 2001 [ | |
| Vitamin E has skin barrier-stabilizing properties | Packer et al., 2001 [ | |
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| Lycopene | UV light decreased skin lycopene concentrations more so than skin | Ribaya-Mercadoet al., 1995 [ |
| Lycopene protects against UV-induced erythema in humans | ||
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| Carotenoids (carotene,
| Carotenoids are efficient in photoprotection, scavenging singlet oxygen, and peroxyl radicals. Supplements or a carotenoid-rich diet decreased sensitivity against UV-induced erythema | Sies and Stahl, 2004 [ |
| Supplementation with carotenoids contributes to basal protection of the skin but is not sufficient to obtain complete protection against severe UV irradiation | Stahl and Krutmann, 2006 [ | |
| Dietary beta-carotene has effect on wrinkles and elasticity, procollagen gene expression, and ultraviolet (UV)-induced DNA damage in human skin | Cho et al., 2010 [ | |
| Erythema-protective effect of a carotenoid mix inhibited serum lipid peroxidation | Heinrich et al., 1998 [ | |
| Presupplementation with | Gollnick et al., 1996 [ | |
| Inhibition of UV-induced epidermal damage and tumor formation in mouse models | Mathews-Roth and Krinsky, 1987 [ | |
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| Tretinoin | Topical tretinoin ameliorates the clinical signs of photoaging | Cordero, 1983 [ |
| The treatment of photodamaged skin with tretinoin increased collagen I formation. | Griffiths et al., 1993 [ | |
| Topical tretinoin is safe and effective in the treatment of photodamage | Gilchrest, 1997 [ | |
| Improvement in photodamaged skin | Weinstein et al., 1991 [ | |
| Topical tretinoin reduced the effects of photoaging | Voorhees, 1990 [ | |
| Topical tretinoin in combination with sun protection as a useful approach to the treatment of sun-damaged skin | Leyden, 1998 [ | |
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| Coenzyme Q10 (CoQ10) | Topical application of CoQ10 has the beneficial effect of preventing photoaging | Hoppe et al., 1999 [ |
| Coenzyme Q10 protects against oxidative stress-induced cell death and enhances the synthesis of basement membrane components in dermal and epidermal cells | Muta-Takada et al., 2009 [ | |
| CoQ10 was shown to reduce UVA-induced MMPs in cultured human dermal fibroblasts | Inui et al., 2008 [ | |
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| Glutathione | Glutathione is a photoprotective agent in skin cells | Connor and Wheeler, 1987 [ |
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| Zinc | Zn-treated fibroblasts were more resistant to UVR than cells grown in normal medium | Richard et al., 1993 [ |
| Zn can positively influence the effects of oxidative stress on cultured human retinal pigment epithelial (RPE) cells | Tate et al., 1999 [ | |
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| Resveratrol | Application of resveratrol to the skin of hairless mice effectively prevented the UVB-induced increase in skin thickness and the development of the skin edema | Afaq and Mukhtar, 2002 [ |
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| Green tea | Green tea polyphenols were shown to reduce UV light-induced oxidative stress and immunosuppression | Katiyar et al., 2000 [ |
| Topical treatment or oral consumption of green tea polyphenols (GTP) inhibits chemical carcinogen- or UV radiation-induced skin carcinogenesis in different laboratory animal models | Katiyar, 2003 [ | |
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| Green tea or caffeine | Oral administration of green tea or caffeine in amounts equivalent to three or five cups of coffee per day to UVB-exposed mice increased levels of p53, slowed cell cycling, and increased apoptotic sun burn cells in the epidermis | Lu et al., 2008 [ |
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| Sylimarin | Silymarin strongly prevents both photocarcinogenesis and skin tumor promotion in mice | Singh and Agarwal, 2002 [ |
| Skin cancer chemopreventive effects | Ahmad et al., 1998 [ | |
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| Genistein | Antioxidant and anticarcinogenic effects on skin | Wei et al., 1995 [ |
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| Cocoa | Dietary flavanols from cocoa contribute to endogenous photoprotection, improve dermal blood circulation, and affect cosmetically relevant skin surface and hydration variables | Heinrich et al., 2006 [ |
| Photoprotection against UV-induced erythema | Heinrich et al., 2006 [ | |
Exogenous antioxidant's mixtures with photoprotective or damage protective effects.
| Antioxidant mixtures | Outcome of the study | Study |
|---|---|---|
| Oral vitamin E and beta-carotene supplementation | Ultraviolet radiation-induced oxidative stress in human skin | McArdle et al., 2004 [ |
| Carotenoids and tocopherols | Scavenging reactive oxygen species generated during photooxidative stress | Stahl et al., 2000 [ |
| Beta-carotene, lutein, and lycopene | UV irradiation induced intensity of erythema was diminished | Albanes et al., 1996 [ |
| Tomato extract and a drink containing solubilized Lyc-o-Mato | Reduction in erythema formation following UV irradiation | Aust et al., 2005 [ |
| Quercetin, hesperetin and naringenin | Protective agents in certain skin diseases caused, initiated, or exacerbated by sunlight irradiation | Bonina et al., 1996 [ |
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| MEDs increased markedly after intake of the combination of | Fuchs and Kern, 1998 [ |
| Combination of vitamins C and E | Mean MEDs increased in group receiving vitamins compared with baseline |
Eberlein-Konig et al., 1998 [ |
| Vitamin C, vitamin E, lycopene, beta-carotene, the rosemary polyphenol, and carnosic acid | Vitamin C, vitamin E, and carnosic acid showed photoprotective potential human dermal fibroblasts exposed to ultraviolet-A (UVA) | Offord et al., 2002 [ |
| Lycopene, beta-carotene, alpha-tocopherol, and selenium | Many parameters of the epidermal defense against UV-induced damage were significantly improved |
C |
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| Significant increase of melanin concentrations in skin was found | Postaire et al., 1997 [ |
| Carotenoids (beta-carotene and lycopene), vitamins C and E, selenium, and proanthocyanidins | A selective protection of the skin against irradiation was confirmed | Greul et al., 2002 [ |
Exogenous antioxidants with no protective/beneficial effects.
| Antioxidant | Outcome of the study (nonbeneficial results) | Study |
|---|---|---|
| Lycopene | Lycopene enhances UVA-induced oxidative stress in C3H cells | Yeh et al., 2005 [ |
| Carotenoids | Carotenoids were not protective against DNA lesions repairable by excision repair | Wolf et al., 1988 [ |
| No significant change in the intensity of erythema; no effects of supplementation | Garmyn et al., 1995 [ | |
| No significant difference between the beta-carotene and placebo groups in incidence of cancer | Green et al., 1999 [ | |
| No significant effect of | Greenberg et al., 1990 [ | |
| An average of 12 years of supplementation with beta-carotene does not affect the development of a first NMSC |
Frieling et al., 2000 [ | |
| Supplementation with | Hennekens et al., 1996 [ |