| Literature DB >> 25071575 |
Josephine A Wright1, Toby Richards1, Surjit K S Srai2.
Abstract
In this review article we discuss current knowledge about iron in the skin and the cutaneous wound healing process. Iron plays a key role in both oxidative stress and photo-induced skin damage. The main causes of oxidative stress in the skin include reactive oxygen species (ROS) generated in the skin by ultraviolet (UVA) 320-400 nm portion of the UVA spectrum and biologically available iron. We also discuss the relationships between iron deficiency, anemia and cutaneous wound healing. Studies looking at this fall into two distinct groups. Early studies investigated the effect of anemia on wound healing using a variety of experimental methodology to establish anemia or iron deficiency and focused on wound-strength rather than effect on macroscopic healing or re-epithelialization. More recent animal studies have investigated novel treatments aimed at correcting the effects of systemic iron deficiency and localized iron overload. Iron overload is associated with local cutaneous iron deposition, which has numerous deleterious effects in chronic venous disease and hereditary hemochromatosis. Iron plays a key role in chronic ulceration and conditions such as rheumatoid arthritis (RA) and Lupus Erythematosus are associated with both anemia of chronic disease and dysregulation of local cutaneous iron hemostasis. Iron is a potential therapeutic target in the skin by application of topical iron chelators and novel pharmacological agents, and in delayed cutaneous wound healing by treatment of iron deficiency or underlying systemic inflammation.Entities:
Keywords: iron; iron chelating agents; skin; ultraviolet; wound-healing
Year: 2014 PMID: 25071575 PMCID: PMC4091310 DOI: 10.3389/fphar.2014.00156
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Pharmacol ISSN: 1663-9812 Impact factor: 5.810
Summary of iron chelators.
| Iron Chelator | Summary | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Structure | Derivative | Mechanisms | Application | |
| Hexidentate structure comprising multiple carbonyl and hydroxyl groups that donate electrons Fe3+, making it chemically inert, by preventing further redox cycling. Chelates iron in a one-to-one ratio | Bacterial siderophore produced by actinobacteria | Clinically, the most widely used iron chelator to treat iron over-load. Applied topically to the skin in experimental studies | ||
| Bidentate iron chelator | Various species of | Varying rates of interaction with cellular iron pools in different tissues; effects on plasma iron pools remain incompletely understood | Current applications are cosmetic: “natural” antioxidant and skin lightener | |
| Bidentate iron chelator | Antibacterial effect | Clinically used for beta-thalassemia major treatment; its use is limited by toxicity (agranulocytosis/ liver failure). Applied topically to the skin in experimental studies. | ||
| Lipophilic bidentate iron chelator. Causes loss of function of catalase and peroxidase enzymes | Also classified as a hydroxypyridinone antifungal agent. Further anti-inflammatory properties | Topical treatment of onychomycosis, tinea pedis and corporis. | ||