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Inhibitory Effect of Ursolic Acid on Ultraviolet B Radiation-Induced Oxidative Stress and Proinflammatory Response-Mediated Senescence in Human Skin Dermal Fibroblasts. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Ultraviolet (UV) radiation causes inflammation and oxidative damage in skin cells, leading to photoaging and increased cancer risk.
  • Ursolic acid (UA) was tested for its protective effects against UVB-induced damage in human skin fibroblast cells, focusing on various cellular responses like cell viability, DNA damage, and inflammation.
  • Results showed that UA pretreatment significantly reduced harmful effects of UVB exposure, including oxidative stress and inflammatory responses, indicating its potential as a therapeutic agent for protecting skin from photoaging and UV damage.

Article Abstract

Ultraviolet radiation is an environmental carcinogenic agent that enhances inflammation and immunological reactions in the exposed human skin cells leading to oxidative photoaging of the epidermal and dermal segment. In the present study, we investigated the protective role of ursolic acid (UA) against ultraviolet B (UVB) radiation- induced photoaging an model of human skin dermal fibroblasts. UA-pretreated human skin dermal fibroblast (HDF) cells were exposed to UVB radiation to evaluated cell viability, reactive oxygen species (ROS), mitochondrial membrane potential, lipid peroxidation, antioxidant status, DNA damage, proinflammatory response, apoptotic induction, and matrix metalloproteinase (MMP) alteration. The UA pretreatment of HDFs mitigated the UVB irradiation-induced cytotoxicity, ROS generation, and mitochondrial membrane potential alteration and lipid peroxidation, depletion of antioxidant status, DNA damage, and apoptotic induction. UA pretreatment of HDFs also attenuated the UVB-induced expression of inflammatory (TNF- and NF-B) and apoptotic (p53, Bax, and caspase-3) and MMPs (MMP-2 and MMP-9) and enhanced the Bcl-2 protein levels in 20 M UA treatment, when compared to concentrations. Hence, these results revealed that UA has the potential to mitigate UVB-induced extracellular damage by interfering with the ROS-mediated apoptotic induction and photoaging senescence and thus is a potential therapeutic agent to protect the skin against UVB-irradiation induced photooxidative damage.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7313156PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2020/1246510DOI Listing

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