| Literature DB >> 27148370 |
Uraiwan Panich1, Gunya Sittithumcharee1, Natwarath Rathviboon1, Siwanon Jirawatnotai1.
Abstract
Skin is the largest human organ. Skin continually reconstructs itself to ensure its viability, integrity, and ability to provide protection for the body. Some areas of skin are continuously exposed to a variety of environmental stressors that can inflict direct and indirect damage to skin cell DNA. Skin homeostasis is maintained by mesenchymal stem cells in inner layer dermis and epidermal stem cells (ESCs) in the outer layer epidermis. Reduction of skin stem cell number and function has been linked to impaired skin homeostasis (e.g., skin premature aging and skin cancers). Skin stem cells, with self-renewal capability and multipotency, are frequently affected by environment. Ultraviolet radiation (UVR), a major cause of stem cell DNA damage, can contribute to depletion of stem cells (ESCs and mesenchymal stem cells) and damage of stem cell niche, eventually leading to photoinduced skin aging. In this review, we discuss the role of UV-induced DNA damage and oxidative stress in the skin stem cell aging in order to gain insights into the pathogenesis and develop a way to reduce photoaging of skin cells.Entities:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27148370 PMCID: PMC4842382 DOI: 10.1155/2016/7370642
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Stem Cells Int Impact factor: 5.443
Figure 1Skin aging induced by UVR-induced DNA damage to ESCs. UVR is the major skin stressor capable of damaging ESC DNA (UV-B) or promoting production of the DNA toxic ROS (UV-A). DNA damaging effects of UVR result in activation of cell cycle arrest (checkpoint activation) and DNA repair proteins, damaged stem cell niche, and dermal fibroblasts. These facilitate ESC depletion and loss of extracellular matrix (ECM) integrity, leading to premature skin aging.
Figure 2Anti-ROS as a potential anti-skin aging intervention. Possible interventions that delay ESC DNA damage, by preventing UVR exposure using sunscreen, anti-ROS, or upregulation of antioxidant proteins.