Dendrobium polysaccharide (DOP) ameliorates the LL-37-induced rosacea by inhibiting NF-κB activation in a mouse model.
Zeng. Bijun B; Yang. Zhibo Z; Jiang. Gufen G; Zhou. Hongxia H; Zhang. Yujin Y; Wang. Chang C; Peng. Youhua Y; Yan. Yining Y; Chen. Zi Z
Key Findings
- DOP improved skin appearance and lowered erythema scores in the mouse rosacea model
- DOP suppressed the TLR4/NF‑κB signaling pathway and reduced p‑NF‑κB levels
- DOP decreased neutrophil infiltration and pro‑inflammatory cytokine production
Practical Outcomes
- The results are only from a mouse study, so there’s no direct protocol for people yet. It hints that DOP could become a topical anti‑rosacea ingredient, but human safety, effective dose, and formulation are still unknown. Biohackers should wait for clinical data before trying it.
Summary
In mice that were given a peptide (LL‑37) to cause rosacea‑like skin inflammation, a plant‑derived sugar mixture called Dendrobium polysaccharide (DOP) reduced redness, skin damage, and inflammation by blocking a key immune pathway (TLR4/NF‑κB).
Abstract
Rosacea, a common chronic inflammatory skin disease worldwide, is currently incurable with complex pathogenesis. Dendrobium polysaccharide (DOP) may exert therapeutic effects on rosacea via acting on the NF-κB-related inflammatory and oxidative processes. In this study, an LL-37-induced rosacea-like mouse model was established. HE staining was used to assess the skin lesions, erythema severity scores, pathological symptoms, and inflammatory cell numbers of mice in each group. The inflammation level was quantitatively analyzed using enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) and reverse transcription-quantitative real-time polymerase chain reaction (RT-qPCR). The expression levels of TLR4 and p-NF-κB were finally detected. DOP improved skin pathological symptoms of rosacea mice. DOP also alleviated the inflammation of rosacea mice. Moreover, the TLR4/NF-κB pathway was observed to be inhibited in the skin of mice after DOP application. These findings evidenced the anti-inflammatory effects of DOP on the LL-37-induced rosacea mouse model. DOP could inhibit NF-κB activation, suppress neutrophil infiltration, and reduce pro-inflammatory cytokines production, which may be the reason for DOP protecting against rosacea. This study may propose an active candidate with great potential for rosacea drug development and lay a solid experimental foundation for promoting DOP application in rosacea therapy.
Study Information
pubmed
2024
2024-01-01T00:00:00.000Z
10.1111/srt.13543
5
37