| Literature DB >> 28341207 |
Hyoung-June Kim1, Il-Hong Bae2, Eui Dong Son1, Juyearl Park1, Nari Cha1, Hye-Won Na1, Changjo Jung1, You-Seak Go3, Dae-Yong Kim4, Tae Ryong Lee5, Dong Wook Shin6.
Abstract
Ambient air pollution is becoming more severe worldwide, posing a serious threat to human health. Fine airborne particles of particulate matter (PM2.5) show higher cytotoxicity than other coarse fractions. Indeed, PM2.5 induces cardiovascular or respiratory damage; however, few studies have evaluated the detrimental effect of PM2.5 to normal human skin. We used a next-generation sequencing-based (RNA-Seq) method with transcriptome and Gene Ontology (GO) enrichment analysis to determine the harmful influences of PM2.5 on human normal epidermal keratinocytes. DAVID analysis showed that the most significantly enriched GO terms were associated with epidermis-related biological processes such as "epidermis development (GO: 0008544)" and "keratinocyte differentiation (GO: 0030216)", suggesting that PM2.5 has some deleterious effects to the human epidermis. In addition, Ingenuity Pathway Analysis predicted inflammation-related signaling as one of the major PM2.5-induced signaling pathways, and pro-inflammatory cytokines as upstream regulators with symptoms similar to psoriasis as downstream effects. PM2.5 caused considerable changes in the expression of pro-inflammatory cytokines and psoriatic skin disease-related genes, might lead to epidermal dysfunctions. Our results might help to understand the mechanism of air pollution-induced skin barrier perturbation and contribute to the development of a new strategy for the prevention or recovery of the consequent damage.Entities:
Keywords: Human normal keratinocytes; Next-generation sequencing; Particulate matter
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28341207 DOI: 10.1016/j.toxlet.2017.03.010
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Toxicol Lett ISSN: 0378-4274 Impact factor: 4.372