Publications by authors named "Dominique Fagot"

The term probiotic has been defined by experts as live microorganisms, which when administered in adequate amounts, confer a health benefit on the host. Probiotics are, thus, by definition, live microorganisms, and the viability of probiotics is a prerequisite for certain benefits, such as the release of metabolites at the site or adhesion properties, for example. However, some semi-active or non-replicative bacterial preparations may retain a similar activity to the live forms.

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Jasmonic acid is involved in plant wound repair and tissue regeneration, but no study has been reported in human skin. The effect of a jasmonic acid derivative, tetra-hydro-jasmonic acid (LR2412, 1 and 10 μm) was investigated on an in vitro reconstructed skin model, Episkin™. Using real time RTQPCR studies, results showed an increase in hyaluronan synthase 2 (HAS2) and hyaluronase synthase 3 (HAS3) expression.

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Dermal fibroblasts are responsible for the generation of mechanical forces within their surrounding extracellular matrix and can be potentially targeted by anti-aging ingredients. Investigation of the modulation of fibroblast contraction by these ingredients requires the implementation of three-dimensional in situ imaging methodologies. We use multiphoton microscopy to visualize unstained engineered dermal tissue by combining second-harmonic generation that reveals specifically fibrillar collagen and two-photon excited fluorescence from endogenous cellular chromophores.

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Chronic exposure of human skin to solar UV radiation leads to serious dermal damages, a hallmark of photoaging. In vivo, acute UV radiation has been shown previously to induce various matrix-degrading proteases. Among them, matrix metalloproteinase-1 (MMP-1) has been suggested to be involved in skin photodamage.

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Human skin is a complex multifunctional organ which covers and surrounds the whole body ensuring a key function of protection against external injuries. Because of this unique situation, aging of skin is the result of both extrinsic factors-mostly sun exposure leading to photoaging- and intrinsic factors assumed to represent chronological aging. Studies of such complex phenomena on human volunteers is questionable and classical cultures of skin cells are not close enough to in vivo physiological conditions.

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In vivo, matrix metalloproteinases are produced in response to ultraviolet B (UV-B) irradiation and are considered to be involved in connective tissue alterations observed in photoaging. The respective roles of keratinocytes and fibroblasts in UV-B-induced MMP-1 production were investigated in monolayer cultures of keratinocytes and fibroblasts as well as in an epidermis model reconstructed in vitro. In contrast to fibroblasts, which secreted MMP-1 in response to UV-B irradiation, no accumulation of MMP-1 was observed after UV-B irradiation of keratinocytes.

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