| Literature DB >> 35567250 |
Daiva Dranseikienė1, Gabrielė Balčiūnaitė-Murzienė2, Jūratė Karosienė3, Dmitrij Morudov3, Nomeda Juodžiukynienė4, Nataliia Hudz5,6, Rima Jūratė Gerbutavičienė7, Nijolė Savickienė1.
Abstract
Cyano-phycocyanin is one of the active pigments of the blue-green algae and is usually isolated from the filamentous cyanobacteria Arthrospira platensis Gomont (Spirulina). Due to its multiple physiological functions and non-toxicity, cyano-phycocyanin may be a potential substance for the topical treatment of various skin diseases. Considering that the conventional medicine faces drug resistance, insufficient efficacy and side effects, the plant origin compounds can act as an alternative option. Thus, the aim of this paper was to review the wound healing, antimicrobial, antioxidative, anti-inflammatory, antimelanogenic and anticancer properties and mechanisms of cyano-phycocyanin topical activities on human skin. Moreover, possible applications and biotechnological requirements for pharmaceutical forms of cyano-phycocyanin for the treatment of various skin diseases are discussed in this review.Entities:
Keywords: anti-inflammatory effect; anticancer effect; antimelanogenic effect; antimicrobial effect; antioxidative activity; cyano-phycocyanin; cyanobacteria; skin diseases; wound healing
Year: 2022 PMID: 35567250 PMCID: PMC9101960 DOI: 10.3390/plants11091249
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Plants (Basel) ISSN: 2223-7747
Figure 1Physiological properties of C-PC for the topical application.
Investigations of C-PC topical activities.
| No | Study Profile | Origin of C-PC | Dose/Concentration of C-PC | Activity | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | WI-38 fibroblast cells |
| 25, 50, 100 μg/mL | uPA gene regulation through cAMP-mediated PKA pathway | Madhyastha et al. (2006) [ |
| 2 | Human fibroblast cells TIG 3-20 |
| 10–200 μg/mL | wound healing promotion by upregulating uPA, GTPases Cdc 42 and Rac 1 stimulation through PI-3K pathway | Madhyastha et al. (2007) [ |
| 3 | Male mice |
| 75 μg/mL | wound area reduction | Madhyastha et al. (2007) [ |
| 4 | Human keratinocytes |
| 0.0335, 0.335, 3.35, 33.5 μg/mL | proliferation, healing, and migration promotion | Gur et al. (2012) [ |
| 5 | Male rats |
| 1.25, 2.5% | wound healing process improvement | Gur et al. (2012) [ |
| 6 |
|
| 16 μg/mL | antibacterial activity against | Venugopal et al. (2020) [ |
| 7 |
|
| 10, 25, 50, 75, 100 μg/mL | antibacterial activity | Osman et al. (2015) [ |
| 8 |
|
| 10% C-PC extract of the formulation of oleaginous base compared with the same concentration of water-soluble base | antibacterial activity | Nihal et al. (2018) [ |
| 9 |
|
| 40–80 μg/mL | antifungal activity | Murugan et al. (2011) [ |
| 10 | - |
| 1 mg/mL | anti-oxidative activity (DPPH, ABTS methods) | Venugopal et al. (2020) [ |
| 11 | - |
| 0.05–0.3 mg/mL | anti-oxidative activity (DPPH) | Gantar et al. (2012) [ |
| 12 | Human dermal keratinocyte (HaCat) cells |
| 5, 10, 20, 40, 80 μg/mL | ROS production inhibition | Jang et al. (2021) [ |
| 13 | Human dermal fibroblasts | - | 1–20 μg/mL | protection against UVB-induced apoptosis | Kim et al. (2018) [ |
| 14 | Rat histiocytic tumor cells AK-5 |
| 30 μM | DNA fragmentation and apoptosis in tumor cells induction | Pardhasaradhi et al. (2021) [ |
| 15 | Female mice |
| 50, 200, 400 μg/mL | COX-2 and IL-6 expression reduction | Gupta N.K. and Gupta K.P. (2021) [ |
| 16 | Murine melanoma cells |
| 0.05, 0.1, 0.2 μg/mL | tyrosinase activity, melanin production, p38 phosphorylation, MIFT inhibition | Wu et al. (2011) [ |
| 17 | RAW 264.7 mouse macrophage cell line |
| 20 μM | apoptosis induction | Reddy et al. (2003) [ |
| 18 | A375 melanoma cells | - | 6 μM | melanoma cells inhibition | Hao et al. (2018) [ |
| 19 | HeLa cells |
| Different concentrations | apoptosis induction | Li et al. (2010) [ |