Tension as a key factor in skin responses to pollution.
Pambianchi. Erika E; Hagenberg. Zachary Z; Pecorelli. Alessandra A; Pasqui. Arianna A; Therrien. Jean-Philippe JP; Valacchi. Giuseppe G
Key Findings
- Ozone exposure increases gene and protein expression of LL‑37, hBD2, and hBD3 in human skin explants.
- Applying physiological tension to the skin explants amplifies the ozone‑induced rise in LL‑37 and alters other oxidative‑inflammatory markers (COX2, AhR, MMP9, 4HNE).
- Skin tension is a critical factor that can change how skin reacts to environmental stressors, highlighting a limitation of traditional flat skin‑culture models.
Practical Outcomes
- For DIY skin‑care enthusiasts, the work suggests that protecting skin from ozone (e.g., using antioxidant serums or barrier creams) may help modulate LL‑37 levels and support skin immunity. It also hints that mechanical factors like skin tension (tightening, stretching) could influence how well topical interventions work, so incorporating gentle massage or tension‑aware formulations might enhance efficacy.
Summary
The study shows that exposing human skin to ozone (a common air pollutant) raises the levels of the antimicrobial peptide LL‑37, along with other skin‑defense proteins. When the skin is kept under realistic stretch (tension) during the experiment, these changes are even stronger, and other inflammation‑related markers also shift. This tells us that both pollution and the physical state of the skin influence its innate immune response.
Abstract
Being the more apparent organ exposed to the outdoor stressors, the effect of pollution on the skin has been widely studied in the last few decades. Although UV light is known as the most aggressive stressor to which our cutaneous tissue is daily exposed, other components of the tropospheric pollution have also shown to affect skin health and functionality. Among them, ozone has been proven to be one of the most toxic due to its high reactivity with the epidermal lipids. Studying the cutaneous effect of pollution in a laboratory setting presents challenges, therefore it becomes critical to employ appropriate and tailored models that aim to answer specific questions. Several skin models are available nowadays: in vitro models (2D cell lines and 3D cutaneous tissues), ex vivo skin explants and in vivo approaches (animals and humans). Although in the last 20 years researchers developed skin models that closely resemble human skin (3D cutaneous tissues), ex vivo skin explants still remain one of the best models to study cutaneous responses. Unfortunately, one important cutaneous property that is not present in the traditional ex vivo human skin explants is the physiological tension, which has been shown to be a cardinal player in skin structure, homeostasis, functional properties and responses to external stimuli. For this reason, in this study, to confirm and further comprehend the harmful mechanism of ozone exposure on the integumentary system, we have performed experiments using the state of art in cutaneous models: the innovative TenSkin™ model in which ex vivo human skin explants are cultured under physiologically relevant tension during the whole experimental procedure. Specifically, we were interested in corroborating previous findings showing that ozone exposure modulates the expression of cutaneous antimicrobial peptides (AMPs). The present work demonstrates that cutaneous exposure to ozone induces AMPs gene and protein levels (CAMP/LL-37, hBD2, hBD3) and that the presence of tension can further modulate their expression. In addition, different responses between tension and non-tension cultured skin were also observed during the evaluation of OxInflammatory markers [cyclooxygenase-2 (COX2), aryl hydrocarbon receptor (AhR), matrix-metallo-proteinase 9 (MMP9) and 4-hydroxy-nonenal (4HNE)]. This current study supports our previous findings confirming the ability of pollution to induce the cutaneous expression of AMPs via redox signaling and corroborates the principle that skin explants are a good and reliable model to study skin responses even though it underlines the need to holistically consider the role of skin tension before extrapolating the data to real life.
Study Information
pubmed
2023
2023-09-25T00:00:00.000Z
10.1038/s41598-023-42629-6
4
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