Biological effects of air pollution on the function of human skin equivalents

Author:

Reynolds Wil J.1ORCID,Eje Ndubuisi2ORCID,Christensen Paul2ORCID,Li Wen‐Hwa3ORCID,Daly Susan M.3ORCID,Parsa Ramine3ORCID,Chavan Bhaven4ORCID,Birch‐Machin Mark A.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Dermatological Sciences, Institute of Translational and Clinical Research Newcastle University Newcastle upon Tyne UK

2. Bedson Building, Newcastle University Newcastle upon Tyne UK

3. Johnson and Johnson Consumer Inc. Skillman New Jersey USA

4. Croda Europe Ltd Snaith UK

Abstract

AbstractThe World Health Organization reports that 99% of the global population are exposed to pollution levels higher than the recommended air quality guidelines. Pollution‐induced changes in the skin have begun to surface; however, the effects require further investigation so that effective protective strategies can be developed. This study aimed to investigate some of the aging‐associated effects caused by ozone and particulate matter (PM) on human skin equivalents. Full‐thickness skin equivalents were exposed to 0.01 μg/μL PM, 0.05 μg/μL PM, 0.3 ppm ozone, or a combination of 0.01 μg/μL PM and 0.3 ppm ozone, before skin equivalents and culture medium were harvested for histological/immunohistochemical staining, gene and protein expression analysis using qPCR, Western blotting, and ELISA. Markers include MMP‐1, MMP‐3, COL1A1, collagen‐I, 4‐HNE, HMGCR, and PGE2. PM was observed to induce a decrease in epidermal thickness and an enhanced matrix building phenotype, with increases in COL1A1 and an increase in collagen‐I protein expression. By contrast, ozone induced an increase in epidermal thickness and was found to induce a matrix‐degrading phenotype, with decreases in collagen‐I gene/protein expression and increases in MMP‐1 and MMP‐3 gene/protein expression. Ozone was also found to induce changes in lipid homeostasis and inflammation induction. Some synergistic damage was also observed when combining ozone and 0.01 μg/μL PM. The results presented in this study identify distinct pollutant‐induced effects and show how pollutants may act synergistically to augment damage; given individuals are rarely only exposed to one pollutant type, exposure to multiple pollutant types should be considered to develop effective protective interventions.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Cancer Research,Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology (miscellaneous),Molecular Medicine,Physiology

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