| Literature DB >> 36005491 |
Berenice Santiesteban-Romero1, Manuel Martínez-Ruiz1,2, Juan Eduardo Sosa-Hernández1,2, Roberto Parra-Saldívar1,2, Hafiz M N Iqbal1,2.
Abstract
Microalgae are photosynthetic organisms known for producing valuable metabolites under different conditions such as extreme temperatures, high salinity, osmotic pressure, and ultraviolet radiation. In recent years, these metabolites have become a trend due to their versatility in applications such as pharmaceuticals, cosmetics, and others. They have even been proposed as an alternative source of bioactive metabolites to avoid the harmful effects on the environment produced by active compounds such as oxybenzone in commercials sunscreens. One of the most studied applications is the use of microalgae for skin care and topical use as cosmeceuticals. With the increasing demand for more environmentally friendly products in cosmetics, microalgae have been further explored in relation to this application. It has been shown that some microalgae are resistant to UV rays due to certain compounds such as mycosporine-like amino acids, sporopollenin, scytonemin, and others. These compounds have different mechanisms of action to mitigate UV damage induced. Still, they all have been proven to confer UV tolerance to microalgae with an absorbance spectrum like the one in conventional sunscreens. This review focuses on the use of these microalgae compounds obtained by UV stimulation and takes advantage of their natural UV-resistant characteristics to potentially apply them as an alternative for UV protection products.Entities:
Keywords: MAAs; bio-carriers; biomedical application; microalgae; photo protectants; scytonemin; sporopollenin
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 36005491 PMCID: PMC9409820 DOI: 10.3390/md20080487
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mar Drugs ISSN: 1660-3397 Impact factor: 6.085
Figure 1Negative effects of different UV rays on people, including photoaging, inflammation and the possible occurrence of skin cancer. In marine organisms, UV rays affect as well as DNA and organism growth. Created with BioRender.com (accessed on 1 May 2022) and extracted under premium membership.
Figure 2Different tolerance mechanisms against environmental UV stress present in microalgae. Created with BioRender.com (accessed on 1 May 2022) and extracted under premium membership.
Microalgae that have been reported to have UV resistance compounds.
| Microalgae | UV Type | Units/Range | Resistance Factor | Type of Study | Culture Media | Growth | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| UV-B | 1 W m−2 for 4 h/day | Scytonemin, MAAs | Exposure to UV-B radiation | BG-11 (without nitrogen sources) with NH4Cl | 28 ± 2 °C | [ | |
|
| UV-A | 320 nm | Sporopollenin, Scytonemin, MAAs | Exposure to UV-A irradiance | BG-11 medium | 23 °C | [ |
|
| UV-B | 250 to 450 nm | Self-emulsifying base cetearyl alcohol (and) dicetyl hosphate (and) ceteth-10 phosphate (Crodafos® CES) | Analysis of photoprotection activity | CHU medium | 25 ± 1 °C | [ |
| UV-A | 250 to 400 nm | MAAs, Carotenoids | Exposure to UV-A radiation | BG-11 | 25 °C | [ | |
|
| UV-B | 400 to 700 nm | Antioxidant enzyme superoxide dismutase | Acclimation to PAR | GP5 medium | 1.0 ± 0.5 °C | [ |
| UV-C | 0.01 to 0.20 W m−2 | Chlorophyll a (Chl a), Carotenoids | Exposure to different UV-C irradiances | BG-11 medium | 25 ± 1 °C | [ | |
| UV-B | 1 to 5 W m−2 | Sporopollenin, Scytonemin, MAAs | Exposure to UV-B radiation | Bold Basal medium | 25 ± 1 °C | [ | |
|
| UV-A | 380 to 415 nm, power of 2.9 W m−2 | Carotenoids, MAAs, Sporopollenin | Exposure to high fluxes of visible light and UV-A | BG-11 medium | 24 °C | [ |
| UV-B, UV-A | 110 mmol m−2s−1 for UV-A | β-carotene | Exposure to UV-A and UV-B radiation | Medium with NaCl | 26 °C | [ | |
| NR | 2 W m−2 | MAAs | Long-term exposure to artificial UV radiation | NR | NR | [ | |
| UV-B | 2 to 15 W m−2 | MAAs (mycosporine-Gly, palythine, asterina, shinorine and porphyra) | Exposure to extreme UV-B irradiance | NR | 26 °C | [ | |
| UV-B | 250 to 750 nm | Xanthophylls, MAAs | Tested under fixed light | f/2 medium | 10 °C | [ | |
|
| UV-B, UV-A | NR | Recovery of the photosynthetic parameters | Exposure to UV-A and UV-B radiation | Artificial seawater | NR | [ |
|
| NR | 500 lux | Astaxanthin | Exposure to artificial UV radiation | Bold Basal medium | 24 °C | [ |
|
| UV-B | 0.8 ± 0.1 mW cm−2 | Scytonemin, MAAs | Exposure to UVB-R | ASN III medium | 30 ± 2 °C | [ |
| UV-B | 8 W m−2 | MAAs, Scytonemin | Exposure to UV radiation | Liquid culture medium | 23 °C | [ | |
|
| UV-A | 6 to 24 W m−2 | Sporopollenin, Scytonemin, mycosporine-like amino acids | Exposure to different levels of UVA radiation | Instant Ocean artificial sea water | 25 °C | [ |
| UV-B | 312 nm | Carotenoids, Scytonemin | Analysis of photosynthetic activity | BG-11 medium | 25 °C | [ | |
|
| UV-A | 320 nm | Not identified | Exposure to UVA irradiance | BG-11 medium | 23 °C | [ |
|
| UV-B, UV-A | 110 kJ m−2 | D1 protein, Activation of antioxidant enzymes | Exposure to UVA-R and UVB-R | Artificial seawater | NR | [ |
NR: Not reported; MAAs: mycosporine-like amino acids.
Applications of bio-carriers with microalgae for drug delivery.
| Material Used | Microalgae | Component Loaded | Formulation | Purpose | Types of Tests | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chitosan |
| 5-Fluorouracil | Chitosan (1%( | Drug delivery | In vitro cytotoxicity test | [ |
| Alginate and Chitosan |
| Microalgae oil extract | PVA solution (7–8% ( | Nanoparticle production to deliver bioactive compounds in microalgae | In vitro release testing | [ |
| Alginate, PVA | Microalgae oil extract | PVA solution (8% ( | Nanoparticle production to deliver bioactive compounds in microalgae | In vitro release profile of nanoparticles | [ | |
| Alginate, cellulose |
| Tea tree essential oil | Microfibrillated cellulose, nanofibrillated cellulose and carboxymethylcellulose (0.01% ( | Cosmetic application | Differential scanning calorimetry | [ |
| Cellulose |
| - | Microalgae powder, sodium dodecyl sulfate | Sensor for pollutant detection | - | [ |
| Gelatin |
| Microalgae extract | Wound dressing with antimicrobial | In vitro studies for antibacterial activity | [ |