| Literature DB >> 33918445 |
Abstract
Skin disorders showing abnormal pigmentation are often difficult to manage because of their uncertain etiology or pathogenesis. Abnormal pigmentation is a common symptom accompanying aging skin. The association between skin aging and skin pigmentation abnormalities can be attributed to certain inherited disorders characterized by premature aging and abnormal pigmentation in the skin and some therapeutic modalities effective for both. Several molecular mechanisms, including oxidative stress, mitochondrial DNA mutations, DNA damage, telomere shortening, hormonal changes, and autophagy impairment, have been identified as involved in skin aging. Although each of these skin aging-related mechanisms are interconnected, this review examined the role of each mechanism in skin hyperpigmentation or hypopigmentation to propose the possible association between skin aging and pigmentation abnormalities.Entities:
Keywords: DNA damage; autophagy impairment; hormonal change; oxidative stress; skin aging; skin pigmentation abnormalities; telomere shortening
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33918445 PMCID: PMC8038212 DOI: 10.3390/ijms22073727
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Figure 1Schematic view of causative factors involved in skin aging. Skin aging is influenced by several factors including oxidative stress, mitochondrial DNA mutations, DNA damage, telomere shortening, hormonal changes, and autophagy impairment.
Abnormal skin pigmentation in congenital disorders related to oxidative stress.
| Pigment Change | Mutated Gene | Dysfunction | Skin Symptom | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hyper |
| Oxidative phosphorylation defect, | Linear skin defects with hyperpigmented streaks | [ |
|
| Accumulation of damaged mitochondria, | Photosensitivity, Hyperpigmentation, freckling, and dryness in sun-exposed areas | [ | |
|
| Reduction of electron transfer between respiratory complex I-III and ROS detoxification enzymes, | Morphological abnormalities including hyperpigmentation | [ | |
|
| Mitochondrial dysfunction, | Nevi | [ | |
|
| Reduction of oxidative phosphorylation efficiency | Linear skin defects syndrome exhibiting skin pigmentation | [ | |
|
| Mitochondrial abnormalities | Variegate porphyria characterized by photosensitivity, skin fragility, hypertrichosis, and hyperpigmentation | [ | |
|
| Mitochondrial DNA depletion | Hyperpigmentation in the antecubital and popliteal fossae and dorsa of the feet | [ | |
| Hypo |
| Mitochondrial redox imbalance by copper accumulation | Melanogenesis impairment | [ |
|
| Mitochondrial cytopathy | Skin and hair abnormalities including hypopigmentation | [ | |
| Mitochondrial DNA deletion | Mitochondrial multisystem disorder | Hypopigmented patches like hypomelanosis of Ito | [ | |
|
| H2O2-mediated stress | Piebaldism | [ |
Acquired abnormal skin pigmentation related to oxidative stress.
| Pigment Change | Disease/Condition | Evidence for Oxidative Stress-Related | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Hyper | UV-induced melanogenesis | Improvement of hyperpigmentation by antioxidant therapy | [ |
| Hyperpigmentation on skin equivalents by squalene monohydroperoxides, which is ameliorated by 12-hydroxystearic acid | [ | ||
| Melasma | Increased malondialdehyde with decreased catalase in serum | [ | |
| Clinical trial using antioxidant drugs | [ | ||
| Seborrheic keratosis | Role of guanine deaminase in UV-induced keratinocyte senescence via ROS generation | [ | |
| Hypo | Vitiligo | Elevated superoxide dismutase and malondialdehyde | [ |
| Reduced catalase or catalase gene polymorphism | [ | ||
| [ | |||
| Increased mitochondrial DNA copy numbers or mitochondrial dysfunction | [ | ||
| Upregulated TRPM2 | [ | ||
| Autophagy impairment | [ |
Abnormal skin pigmentation in congenital disorders related to DNA damage.
| Pigment Change | Mutated Gene | Dysfunction | Skin Symptom | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hyper | Abnormal regulation of UV-induced DNA damage response | Hyperpigmentation of mucous membranes and the skin | [ | |
| Hyper and hypo |
| Defects in many aspects of DNA metabolism | Accelerated aging such as atrophic skin and pigment changes | [ |
| Defects in damaged DNA repair | Photosensitivity, Lentigines, Hyperpigmentation and hypopigmentation, | [ | ||
| Fanconi anemia | Defects in interstrand crosslink repair and telomere maintenance | Poikilodermatic change with hypopigmentation, hyperpigmentation, and telangiectasia | [ | |
| Hypo | Deletion on 15q11.2-q13 | Leukocyte telomere length shortening | Hypopigmentation | [ |
| Oculocutaneous albinism and Hermansky-Pudlak syndrome | Increased tyrosinase degradation through ubiquitin-proteasome system | Oculocutaneous | [ |
Acquired abnormal skin pigmentation related to DNA damage.
| Pigment Change | Disease/Condition | Evidence for DNA Damage-Related | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Hyper | UV-induced melanogenesis | Role of α-MSH secreted from UV-damaged keratinocytes in melanogenesis | [ |
| Hypo | Leukotrichia | Associated with | [ |
Abnormal skin pigmentation in congenital disorders related to telomere shortening.
| Pigment Change | Mutated Gene | Dysfunction | Skin Symptom | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hyper |
| Telomere maintenance defect | Reticular hyperpigmentation, | [ |
| Hyper and hypo |
| Defect in telomere stability and recognition of DNA photoproducts | Photosensitivity, | [ |
| Fanconi anemia | Defect in DNA repair for telomere maintenance | Poikilodermatic change with hypopigmentation, hyperpigmentation, and telangiectasia | [ | |
|
| Rapid telomere erosion | Hyperpigmentation and hypopigmentation over areas of sclerodermoid change | [ |
Abnormal skin pigmentation in disorders related to autophagy impairment.
| Pigment Change | Causative Factor | Dysfunction | Skin Symptom | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hyper | Reduced Hsp70-1A | Decrease in autophagic melanosome degradation | Skin color | [ |
| Accelerated keratinocyte senescence caused by arginase-2 upregulation | Decrease in autophagic melanosome degradation | Hyperpigmented lesion of melasma | [ | |
| Premature skin aging | Significant decreases in autophagy | Hyperpigmented lesion of senile lentigo | [ | |
| Chemical agents | Autophagy activation | Lightening of skin hyperpigmentation | [ | |
| Light-emitting diodes | Autophagy activation | Lightening of skin hyperpigmentation | [ | |
| Hypo | Autophagosome-lysosome fusion defect, leading to antioxidant defense system disruption | Oculocutaneous hypopigmentation | [ | |
| Autophagic dysregulation by mTOR signaling pathway activation | Hypopigmented macules | [ | ||
| Downregulated GPNMB | Defect in melanosome formation and autophagy | Hypopigmented macules | [ | |
| Reduced melanocyte survival | Vitiligo | [ |
Figure 2Schematic view of the possible association between abnormal pigmentation and skin aging. Some causative mechanisms, such as DNA damage and telomere shortening, are involved in hereditary disorders that show accelerated aging and skin hyperpigmentation or hypopigmentation, providing reliable evidence for the association between skin aging and pigmentation abnormalities. However, oxidative stress, hormonal changes, and autophagy impairment, may not yet sufficiently support the relationship between skin aging and pigmentation abnormalities.