| Literature DB >> 25546388 |
Claire Marionnet1, Caroline Tricaud2, Françoise Bernerd3.
Abstract
The link between chronic sun exposure of human skin and harmful clinical consequences such as photo-aging and skin cancers is now indisputable. These effects are mostly due to ultraviolet (UV) rays (UVA, 320-400 nm and UVB, 280-320 nm). The UVA/UVB ratio can vary with latitude, season, hour, meteorology and ozone layer, leading to different exposure conditions. Zenithal sun exposure (for example on a beach around noon under a clear sky) can rapidly induce visible and well-characterized clinical consequences such as sunburn, predominantly induced by UVB. However, a limited part of the global population is exposed daily to such intense irradiance and until recently little attention has been paid to solar exposure that does not induce any short term clinical impact. This paper will review different studies on non-extreme daily UV exposures with: (1) the characterization and the definition of the standard UV daylight and its simulation in the laboratory; (2) description of the biological and clinical effects of such UV exposure in an in vitro reconstructed human skin model and in human skin in vivo, emphasizing the contribution of UVA rays and (3) analysis of photoprotection approaches dedicated to prevent the harmful impact of such UV exposure.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 25546388 PMCID: PMC4307236 DOI: 10.3390/ijms16010068
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Figure 1Spectral irradiance of solar spectra and their associated simulated solar spectra. (a) Solar spectral UV irradiance of DIN 67501 standard spectrum is representative of a spectrum given by zenithal sun [24] and standard UV daylight is representative of non-extreme solar exposure (SEA < 45) [25]; (b) UV-SSR and DUVR spectra are solar simulations of standard solar spectrum and standard UV daylight respectively. The irradiance axis is in logarithmic scale. Note the highest proportion of UVB (290–320 nm) and short UVA (320–340 nm) included in the DIN 67501 standard spectrum compared to the standard UV daylight spectrum. It is also the case for the corresponding simulated spectra.
Examples of worldwide doses of Daily UV radiation (DUVR) received on 15 April. DUVR corresponds to the UV spectrum with a UVA/UVB ratio comprised between 23 and 32, corresponding to a SEA lower than 45°, for almost all the latitudes. Data were calculated from Christiaens et al. [25].
| City | Country | Latitude (Decimal Degrees) | UV Dose (J/cm2) | UV Daylight Dose (J/cm2) | UV Daylight Proportion (%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Oslo | Norway | 59.9 | 112.45 | 57.97 | 52% |
| Copenhagen | Denmark | 55.7 | 122.38 | 64.35 | 53% |
| Moscow | Russia | 55.8 | 122.77 | 64.6 | 53% |
| Berlin | Germany | 52.5 | 129.64 | 69.03 | 53% |
| London | England | 51.5 | 131.94 | 70.5 | 53% |
| Paris | France | 48.9 | 137.59 | 68.31 | 50% |
| Lausanne | Switzerland | 46.5 | 141.98 | 59.55 | 42% |
| Nice | France | 43.7 | 148.12 | 47.33 | 32% |
| Sapporo | Japan | 43.1 | 148.59 | 46.39 | 31% |
| Chicago | USA | 41.9 | 150.48 | 42.63 | 28% |
| Roma | Italy | 41.9 | 150.8 | 41.99 | 28% |
| New York | USA | 40.7 | 152.93 | 37.75 | 25% |
| Madrid | Spain | 40.4 | 153.46 | 36.69 | 24% |
| Lisbon | Portugal | 38.7 | 156.19 | 34.54 | 22% |
| Tunis | Tunisia | 36.8 | 158.92 | 33.73 | 21% |
| Tokyo | Japan | 35.6 | 161.3 | 33.03 | 20% |
| Los Angeles | USA | 34.1 | 163 | 32.52 | 20% |
| Miami | USA | 25.8 | 172.42 | 25.18 | 15% |
| Mexico City | Mexico | 19.4 | 176.82 | 18.3 | 10% |
| Hanoï | Vietnam | 21.0 | 175.99 | 19.57 | 11% |
| Saint Lucia | West-Indies | 13.9 | 177.25 | 18.05 | 10% |
| Bangkok | Thaïland | 13.8 | 177.27 | 18.04 | 10% |
| Darwin | Australia | −12.5 | 154.57 | 11.08 | 7% |
| Brasilia | Brazil | −15.8 | 147.72 | 14.15 | 10% |
| Saint Denis | Reunion | −20.9 | 137.56 | 17.76 | 13% |
| Johannesburg | South Africa | −26.2 | 125.54 | 18.3 | 15% |
| Brisbane | Australia | −27.5 | 122.43 | 18.44 | 15% |
| Sydney | Australia | −33.9 | 106.31 | 22.55 | 21% |
| Cape Town | South Africa | −33.9 | 105.85 | 22.72 | 21% |
| Auckland | New Zealand | −36.5 | 101.5 | 26.7 | 26% |
| Melbourne | Australia | −37.8 | 95.55 | 26.56 | 28% |
Summary of alterations induced in human skin by repeated exposures to Daily UV radiation (DUVR) [23,36].
| Parameters | DUVR Spread over 2 Weeks | DUVR Spread over 4 Weeks | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 9 × 0.25 MED | 9 × 0.50 MED | 9 × 0.75 MED | 19 × 0.5 MED | |||
| Pigmentation | ||||||
| Δa* | + | ++ | +++ | ++ | ||
| Δb* | ns | + | ++ | + | ||
| ΔL* | − | −−− | −−− | − | ||
| Erythema | ns | + | ++ | + | ||
| Hydration | − | − | − | ns | ||
| Biomechanical properties | ||||||
| Elasticity | ns | − | − | ns | ||
| Residual deformation | ns | ns | ns | ND | ||
| Microtopography | ||||||
| Number of wrinkles | ns | ns | − | + | ||
| Coefficient of developed profile | ns | ns | − | ns | ||
| Loss of skin density (densiscore) § | ND | ND | + | ND | ||
| Epidermis | ||||||
| Histology | ||||||
| Epidermal thickness | ns | ns | + | + | ||
| Langerhans cells | ||||||
| Number of Langerhans cells | − | −− | −−− | −− | ||
| Size of Langerhans cells | + | ++ | +++ | ns | ||
| Urocanic acid isomerization | + | ND | ND | ND | ||
| Melanocytes | ||||||
| Number of melanocytes | + | + | + | + | ||
| Size of melanocytes | + | ++ | +++ | + | ||
| Melanin deposition | + | ++ | +++ | + | ||
| Proliferation | ||||||
| Ki-67 + cells | + | ++ | +++ | ns | ||
| Cellular damage | ||||||
| sunburn cell formation | ns | + | + | + | ||
| p53 accumulation | ns | ++ | +++ | + | ||
| Dermis | ||||||
| Tenascin | ns | ns | ++ | + | ||
| Elastin | ns | ns | ns | ns | ||
| Fibrillin | ns | − | − | ND | ||
| Lyzozyme/elastin | ns | ns | ns | + | ||
| Pro-collagen I | − | −− | −−− | ns | ||
| Pro-collagen III/Pro-collagen I | ns | ns | + | ns | ||
| Glycosaminoglycan deposition | − | − | − | −− | ||
Δa*, Δb*, ΔL* are the differences between exposed and non-exposed sites of a*, b* and L* values, respectively; ND, not determined; ns, not significant compared to non-exposed site; +, significant increase compared to non-exposed site; −, significant decrease compared to non-exposed site; the number of + or – reflects the intensity of increase or decrease compared to non-exposed site, respectively; Twelve and 10 volunteers were enrolled for DUVR exposure spread over 2 weeks and over 4 weeks, respectively. § study conducted in 19 volunteers for densiscore measures.
Figure 2Pigmentation induced in human skin exposed to DUVR. Variation of skin pigmentation (ΔE) and luminance (ΔL*) induced by four exposures of 0.75 MED DUVR (from day 0 to day 3) in Caucasian and Asian skin. The evolution of the color of the skin expresses itself through the combination of changes of the coordinates L * a * b * as follows: ΔE = [(ΔL*)2 + (Δa*)2 + (Δb*)2]1/2, where Δa*, Δb*, ΔL* are the differences between exposed and non-exposed sites of a*, b* and L* values, respectively.
Figure 3Morphological changes induced by the biologically efficient doses of DUVR (13 J/cm2), of UVA (25 J/cm2) or of UV-SSR (5.4 J/cm2) in reconstructed human skin [43,44,45,46]. Black arrows indicate the zone where the incidence of fibroblasts has decreased. White arrows indicate sunburn cells.
Figure 4(a) DUVR induced ROS; (b) Cellular response to DUVR induced oxidative stress. Exposure to DUVR induced the modulation of the expression of genes involved in response to oxidative stress, in fibroblasts (F) and keratinocytes (K) of reconstructed human skin. White dotted line indicates dermal epidermal junction. White brackets indicate epidermal positive layer. White arrows indicate examples of positive dermal fibroblasts.
Figure 5Assessment of photoprotection against DUVR in vivo and in vitro. (a) Luminance values seven days after exposure to increasing doses of DUVR in vivo in human skin protected by sunscreen with different UVA-PF [74,75]; (b) In vitro, two days after DUVR exposure, histology of reconstructed skin protected by sunscreen with different UVA-PF [44]; (c) Gene expression profiles in fibroblasts and keratinocytes of reconstructed skin protected or not by a broad spectrum sunscreen and exposed to DUVR [48].