|
UV Radiation Induces Vitamin A Deficiency In Skin
ScienceDaily- ANN ARBOR---That golden
tan may look terrific, but its cost to your skin---premature
aging, wrinkles, sags, blotches, and an increased risk
of skin cancer---may be more than you want to pay. While
it is well known that ultraviolet radiation from the
sun has many effects on skin, scientists still don't
fully understand how UV causes so much damage.
University of Michigan scientists have discovered an
important new piece of the puzzle, however, which they
describe in an article to be published in this week's
Nature Medicine.
"We found that ultraviolet irradiation blocks the
ability of skin cells to recognize and respond to an
essential nutrient called retinoic acid, which skin
cells make from vitamin A or retinol," said John J.
Voorhees, M.D., the Duncan and Ella Poth Distinguished
Professor of Dermatology in the U-M Medical School.
"The inability to respond to retinoic acid triggers
a cascade of biochemical changes that upsets the normal
balance between healthy and dying skin cells. In essence,
UV causes a functional vitamin A deficiency in human
skin.
"We also found that pre--treating skin with retinoic
acid (Retin A)---the active form of vitamin A---before
UV exposure limits the extent of the harmful biochemical
changes."
According to Gary J. Fisher, Ph.D., U-M senior associate
research scientist in dermatology and the study's co-author,
UV causes a major loss of retinoic acid receptors found
in human skin cells."Retinoic acid receptors are the
molecular mediators of the biological actions of vitamin
A. When retinoic acid receptors are lost, it is as if
the skin has no vitamin A," Fisher explained. "This
is a bad situation because vitamin A is required for
normal skin development and function.
Retinoic acid receptors, when activated by retinoic
acid, transfer genetic instructions from DNA to the
cell's protein-producing factory telling it to assemble
proteins needed for skin cell function. "Eight hours
after skin was exposed to UV radiation in our study,
amounts of retinoic acid receptor messenger RNA and
protein were as much as 70 percent lower than control
levels. They remained below normal levels for more than
24 hours after exposure," Fisher said. "When skin was
pre-treated with retinoic acid and then exposed to UV
radiation, the amount of messenger RNA and protein still
dropped, but it rebounded to normal levels within 16
hours. Applying retinoic acid after UV exposure had
no effect."
Voorhees added that when the biochemical retinoic acid
receptor pathway is shut down, other dangerous skin
changes---which also occur in response to UV exposure---can
proceed unchecked. This process was first described
by Voorhees, Fisher and their colleagues, in a series
of articles published in Nature, New England Journal
of Medicine, and Journal of Clinical Investigation.
"In this process, UV activates a protein complex called
AP-1, which causes production of large amounts of enzymes
called matrix metalloproteinases or MMPs," Voorhees
explained. "These MMPs break apart and degrade collagen
and elastin, the major structural materials in skin.
Although the broken-down collagen and elastin are replaced,
the repair process is imperfect. This imperfect repair
results in a tiny defect in the skin. With repeated
UV exposures, the defect grows and eventually results
in the wrinkled appearance of sun-damaged skin. In addition,
the biochemical changes associated with activation of
AP-1 and production of MMPs promote skin cancer."
Although additional research will be needed to completely
understand the complex relationship between the retinoic
acid receptor pathway and the pathway responsible for
producing enzymes that destroy skin collagen, Voorhees
and his colleagues believe the two may exist in a state
of dynamic balance. This dynamic balance may be necessary
to maintain healthy skin. "However, if the retinoic
acid receptor pathway is disabled by UV radiation, the
destructive pathway has free rein to inflict a great
deal of damage," Voorhees said.
Understanding how these two biochemical pathways work
in human skin may lead to new medications or treatments
that could block the harmful effects of UV radiation.
"Our findings suggest that applying retinoic acid or
retinol to skin before going out in the sun might be
beneficial. However, before vitamin A or retinoic acid
can be recommended as a preventive against sun damage,
formal clinical trials must be performed to know whether
this notion is correct," Voorhees added.
Until then, Voorhees emphasized that the U-M study
reinforces the importance of protecting skin from UV
exposure. "Daily exposure to UV radiation---even amounts
too small to produce skin redness---is particularly
dangerous, because the skin never has time to restore
normal levels of retinoic acid receptors." In addition
to Voorhees and Fisher, co-investigators on the U-M
study were ZengQuan Wang, Mohamed Boudjelal and Sewon
Kang all from the Department of Dermatology in the U-M
Health System. The U-M holds a patent on the use of
retinoic acid or retinol to prevent wrinkles and skin
damage caused by UV exposure from the sun.
|