Back to Search
Start Over
Photoprotection conferred by low level summer sunlight exposures against pro-inflammatory UVR insult
- Source :
- Felton, S J, Shin, B B, Watson, R E B, Kift, R, Webb, A R & Rhodes, L E 2020, ' Photoprotection conferred by low level summer sunlight exposures against pro-inflammatory UVR insult ', Photochemical and Photobiological Sciences, vol. 19, no. 6, pp. 810-818 . https://doi.org/10.1039/c9pp00452a
- Publication Year :
- 2020
-
Abstract
- Tanning (melanisation and epidermal thickening) is a photoprotective response to solar UVR exposure, but it's unclear to what degree low-level exposures induce this in light-skin individuals, or whether this modifies the histological inflammatory response to UVR. Objectives were to examine if, in light-skin people, a simulated summer's casual sunlight exposures induces (i) melanogenesis, (ii) epidermal thickening and (iii) demonstrable protection against both clinical (erythema) and histological (neutrophil infiltration) impacts of higher-level, pro-inflammatory UVR challenge. A UVR intervention study was designed to simulate a summer's brief sunlight exposures (95% UVA, 5% UVB) as can provide sufficient vitamin D. Ten healthy adults of phototype II, median 47 years (range 30–59 years), 2 male/8 female, received 1.3 SED 3× weekly for 6 weeks, and were subsequently challenged with 2× personal MED of UVB on small areas of UVR-exposed and UVR-protected buttock skin. Skin erythema and pigmentation were measured spectrophotometrically. Punch biopsies were taken from (i) unexposed skin (ii) skin following the ×18 low-level UVR exposures and (iii) skin at 24 h following the 2 × MED challenge, with skin sections evaluated for epidermal thickness, and for neutrophil infiltration by immunohistochemistry. The 6-weeks’ UVR exposures significantly increased skin pigmentation, skin lightness (L*) reducing from 69.37 (SD 2.8) to 65.52 (2.33) at course-end (p < 0.001), and stratum corneum thickness rising from 29.3 (9.59) to 41.5 (12.7)μm (p < 0.05); there was no influence on neutrophil numbers. Following the pro-inflammatory (2× MED) UVR challenge, there was a small (18%) reduction in erythema but a proportionately greater (71%) reduction in neutrophil infiltration in skin prior-exposed to the UVR course compared with photoprotected skin (both p < 0.05). Thus, findings add to information on risk-benefit of low-level sunlight exposure. Even very light-skin people show measurable although modest photoprotective responses to repeated low-dose UVR; greater impact is seen on histological than clinical inflammation.
- Subjects :
- 0301 basic medicine
Vitamin
Adult
Male
Skin erythema
medicine.medical_specialty
Erythema
Inflammation/etiology
030207 dermatology & venereal diseases
03 medical and health sciences
chemistry.chemical_compound
0302 clinical medicine
visual_art.visual_artist
Sunbathing
Ultraviolet Rays/adverse effects
medicine
Humans
Physical and Theoretical Chemistry
Sunlight
integumentary system
business.industry
Middle Aged
Dermatology
Phototype
030104 developmental biology
chemistry
visual_art
Photoprotection
Sunlight/adverse effects
Female
Seasons
medicine.symptom
business
Skin Pigmentation/radiation effects
Epidermal thickening
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Felton, S J, Shin, B B, Watson, R E B, Kift, R, Webb, A R & Rhodes, L E 2020, ' Photoprotection conferred by low level summer sunlight exposures against pro-inflammatory UVR insult ', Photochemical and Photobiological Sciences, vol. 19, no. 6, pp. 810-818 . https://doi.org/10.1039/c9pp00452a
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....337eacdeedaa83ff7513ebed551884ef
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1039/c9pp00452a