| Literature DB >> 31137673 |
Tse-Hung Huang1,2,3,4, Chwan-Fwu Lin5,6,7, Ahmed Alalaiwe8, Shih-Chun Yang9, Jia-You Fang10,11,12,13.
Abstract
Natural products or herbs can be used as an effective therapy for treating psoriasis, an autoimmune skin disease that involves keratinocyte overproliferation. It has been demonstrated that phytomedicine, which is used for psoriasis patients, provides some advantages, including natural sources, a lower risk of adverse effects, and the avoidance of dissatisfaction with conventional therapy. The herbal products' structural diversity and multiple mechanisms of action have enabled the synergistic activity to mitigate psoriasis. In recent years, the concept of using natural products as antiproliferative agents in psoriasis treatment has attracted increasing attention in basic and clinical investigations. This review highlights the development of an apoptotic or antiproliferatic strategy for natural-product management in the treatment of psoriasis. We systematically introduce the concepts and molecular mechanisms of keratinocyte-proliferation inhibition by crude extracts or natural compounds that were isolated from natural resources, especially plants. Most of these studies focus on evaluation through an in vitro keratinocyte model and an in vivo psoriasis-like animal model. Topical delivery is the major route for the in vivo or clinical administration of these natural products. The potential use of antiproliferative phytomedicine on hyperproliferative keratinocytes suggests a way forward for generating advances in the field of psoriasis therapy.Entities:
Keywords: apoptosis; keratinocyte; mechanism of action; natural product; proliferation; psoriasis
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31137673 PMCID: PMC6566887 DOI: 10.3390/ijms20102558
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 6.208
Figure 1The comparison of healthy skin and psoriatic skin.
Figure 2The cell types involved in psoriasis pathogenesis and the related pathways and interactions.
Current topical drug therapy for psoriasis treatment.
| Drug | Pharmacological Mechanisms | Side Effects on Skin |
|---|---|---|
| Calcineurin inhibitors | Inhibition of T cell activation and of pro-inflammatory cytokine synthesis | Itching and stinging |
| Glucocorticosteroids | Anti-inflammation, anti-mitosis, apoptosis, vasoconstriction, and immunomodulation | Skin atrophy after long term use |
| Vitamin D3 derivatives | Regulation of keratinocyte proliferation, differentiation and apoptosis | Stinging, burning, and peeling skin |
| Retinoids | Normalization of keratinocyte proliferation and differentiation | Redness, peeling, dryness, itching, and burning sensation |
| Keratolytics | Softening/hydration of the stratum corneum and desquamation of hyperkeratotic skin | Redness, swelling, tenderness, and pustules |
| Dithranol | Inhibition of keratinocyte hyperproliferation, granulocyte function, and immune response | Redness and irritation |
| Coal tar | Inhibition of keratinocyte proliferation and correction of the defect of keratinocyte differentiation | Redness, burning, itching, and skin staining |
| Ultraviolet B irradiation (UVB) | Alteration of cytokine profile, induction of apoptosis, and promotion of immunosuppression | Burning and itching |
| Psoralens plus ultraviolet A exposure (PUVA) | Inhibition of DNA replication and production of cell cycle arrest, alteration in the expression of cytokines | A risk for skin cancer |
Figure 3The apoptotic mechanisms of keratinocytes in psoriatic lesion.
Crude extracts derived from the plants for treating hyperproliferation of psoriasis.
| Plant | Experimental Model | Cell or Animal | Method for Detecting Proliferation | Outcomes Offered by Extract | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 60 Chinese herbal medicines | In vitro | HaCaT | MTT assay | Tse et al. [ | |
|
| In vitro | HaCaT | MTT and TUNEL | Apoptosis is the main mechanism for antiproliferation of HaCaT | Tse et al. [ |
| Canadian wood species | In vitro | Normal and psoriatic human keratinocytes | MTT and trypan blue | Yellow birch and black spruce showed high antiproliferative effect | García-Pérez et al. [ |
| Huaier | In vitro | HaCaT | CASY cell counting | A significant proliferation inhibition through apoptosis pathway | Su et al. [ |
| In vitro | HaCaT | Annexin-V staining and caspase-3 | Antiproliferative and anti-inflammatory activities | Shraibom et al. [ | |
|
| In vitro/in vivo | HaCaT/Swiss mouse | MTT assay/TPA-induced inflammation | Inhibition of HaCaT proliferation and oedema caused by TPA | Prudente et al. [ |
|
| In vitro/in vivo | HaCaT/Balb/c mouse | Annexin-V staining/IMQ-induced lesion | Inhibition of HaCaT proliferation and epidermal thickness caused by IMQ | Lee et al. [ |
|
| In vivo | Balb/c mouse | IMQ-induced lesion | Reduction of epidermal thickness caused by IMQ | Lee et al. [ |
|
| Clinical | Psoriatic patients | Biopsy | Reduction of epidermal and dermal T cell infiltration | Augustin et al. [ |
| Indigo naturalis ( | Clinical | Psoriatic patients | Clinical score and biopsy | Reduced Ki-67 and CD3 | Lin et al. [ |
|
| Clnical | Psoriatic patients | Clinical score and K6 expression | Reduced PASI score | Rahmayunita et al. [ |
| St. John’s wort ( | Clnical | Psoriatic patients | Clinical score | Reduced PASI score | Najafizadeh et al. [ |
| St. John’s wort ( | Clnical | Psoriatic patients | TNF-α expression | Reduced TNF-α in epidermis and dendritic cells | Mansouri et al. [ |
IMQ, imiquimod; MTT, 3-(4,5-cimethylthiazol-2-yl)-2,5-diphenyl tetrazolium bromide; TPA, 12-O-Tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate; TUNEL, terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase dUTP nick end labeling.
Pure compounds derived from the plants for treating hyperproliferation of psoriasis.
| Compound | Experimental Model | Cell or Animal | Method for Detecting Proliferation | Outcomes Offered by Extract | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Resveratrol | In vitro | Primary culture of human keratinocytes | MTT assay and hemocytometer cell counting | Dose-dependent antiproliferative activity | Holian and Walter [ |
| Resveratrol | In vitro | Primary culture of human keratinocytes | 7-aminoactinomycin D assay | Reduced aquaporin 3 expression | Wu et al. [ |
| Curcumin | In vitro | TNF-α-activated HaCaT | Annexin-V staining | Apoptosis is the main mechanism for antiproliferation of HaCaT | Sun et al. [ |
| Curcumin | In vitro | HaCaT | Nuclei staining | Increased apoptosis by the combination with UVA or visible light | Dujic et al. [ |
| Curcumin | In vitro | TNF-α-activated HaCaT | Cell counting kit-8 and LDH assay | Increased apoptosis by the combination with red and blue light | Niu et al. [ |
| Rottlerin | In vitro | Primary culture of human keratinocytes | MTT assay | Increased apoptosis in an autophagy-dependent pathway | Min et al. [ |
| Acridone analogs | In vitro | HaCaT | Cell counting and LDH assay | The compounds with benzyl substitution at the 10-position showed potent proliferation inhibition | Putic et al. [ |
| 1,4-Dihydroxy-2-naphthoic acid | In vitro | HaCaT | Sulphorhodamine B staining | Dose-dependent antiproliferative activity | Mok et al. [ |
| Arsenics | In vitro | HaCaT | MTT assay | Significant inhibition on keratinocyte growth with moderate toxicity on fibroblasts | Tse et al. [ |
| Arsenic trioxide | In vitro | HaCaT | MTT and LDH assay | Increased apoptosis via ROS-dependent p53 ubiquitination | Shen et al. [ |
| Baicalein | In vitro | HaCaT | Cell counting | Minor inhibition of proliferation without affecting ROS production | Huang et al. [ |
| Celastrol | In vitro | HaCaT and primary human keratinocytes | MTT assay | Increased apoptosis via Bcl-2 attenuation and Bax upregulation | Zhou et al. [ |
| Tanshinone IIA | In vitro | Primary mouse keratinocytes | MTT assay | Increased apoptosis via caspase pathway | Li et al. [ |
| Dehydrocostuslactone and costunolide | In vitro | Primary human keratinocytes | Annexin-V staining | Inhibited proliferation and inflammation-related genes | Scarponi et al. [ |
| Delphinidin | In vitro | 3D reconstructed psoriatic skin equivalent | Ki-67 and PCNA | Inhibited proliferation and inflammation | Chamcheu et al. [ |
| Rhodomyrtone | In vitro/in vivo | HaCaT/rabbit | MTT assay | Elevated apoptosis with no skin irritation | Chorachoo et al. [ |
| Rhodomyrtone | In vitro/in vivo | Human skin organ culture/ICR mouse | Histology | Reduced epidermal thickness and hyperplasia | Chorachoo et al. [ |
| Phytosphingosine derivatives | In vitro/in vivo | HaCaT/hairless mouse | Cell viability assay kit | Increased programmed keratinocyte death | Kim et al. [ |
| Amentoflavone | In vitro/in vivo | HaCaT/Balb/c mouse | Cell counting kit | Inhibited proliferation and epidermal thickness | An et al. [ |
| Periplogenin | In vitro/in vivo | HaCaT/Balb/c mouse | MTT assay | Inhibited proliferation via necroptotic cell death | Zhang et al. [ |
| 3β,6β,16β-Trihydroxylup-20(29)-ene | In vitro/in vivo | HaCaT/Swiss mouse | MTT and neutral red assay | Reduced keratinocyte viability via apoptosis and ROS generation | Horinouchi et al. [ |
| Rhododendrin | In vitro/in vivo | Normal human keratinocytes/C57BL/6 mouse | MTT assay | Inhibited proliferation and epidermal thickness | Jeon et al. [ |
| 8-Methoxypsoralen derivatives | In vitro/in vivo | HaCaT/Balb/c mouse | MTT assay | Inhibited proliferation and epidermal thickness | Alalaiwe et al. [ |
| Epigallocatechin-3-gallate | In vivo | Balb/c mouse | PCNA | Inhibited epidermal thickness and differentiation regulation | Zhang et al. [ |
Bax, Bcl-2-associated X protein; LDH, lactate dehydrogenase; MTT, 3-(4,5-cimethylthiazol-2-yl)-2,5-diphenyl tetrazolium bromide; PCNA, proliferating cell nuclear antigen; ROS, reactive oxygen species.