Vitamin C attenuates ERK signalling to inhibit the regulation of collagen production by LL-37 in human dermal fibroblasts.
Park. Hyun Jeong HJ; Ock. Sun Myeong SM; Kim. Hee Jung HJ; Park. Hong Jin HJ; Lee. Young Bok YB; Choi. Jung Min JM; Cho. Chul Soo CS; Lee. Jun Young JY; Cho. Baik Kee BK; Cho. Dae Ho DH
Key Findings
- LL‑37 reduces collagen mRNA and protein levels in human dermal fibroblasts via ERK phosphorylation
- Vitamin C (0.5 mM) reverses LL‑37‑induced collagen suppression and lowers reactive oxygen intermediates
- Vitamin C blocks ERK activation and the downstream transcription factor Ets‑1 that LL‑37 uses to control collagen
Practical Outcomes
- For biohackers focused on skin health, this suggests that regular vitamin C intake may counteract factors that suppress collagen, supporting anti‑aging goals. While the work is done in cell cultures, it reinforces using vitamin C (e.g., topical or oral) as part of a collagen‑boosting regimen, especially if you’re exposed to inflammatory or antimicrobial stressors.
Summary
Vitamin C helps skin cells make more collagen by blocking a signaling pathway (ERK) that a natural antimicrobial peptide called LL‑37 uses to lower collagen production. In lab tests, adding vitamin C stopped LL‑37 from reducing collagen and also lowered harmful oxidative stress inside the cells.
Abstract
Vitamin C is used as an anti-ageing agent because of its collagen enhancing effects. The precise cellular signalling mechanism of vitamin C is not well known. Here, we investigate the profibrotic mechanism of vitamin C against LL-37. Antimicrobial peptide LL-37 decreases collagen expression at mRNA and protein levels in human dermal fibroblasts (HDFs). The ability of LL-37 to inhibit collagen expression is dependent on phosphorylation of extracellular signal-regulated kinase (ERK). HDFs and human keloid fibroblasts were treated with vitamin C followed by 2 h of LL-37 treatment. Collagen mRNA expression and total soluble collagen production inhibited by LL-37 was enhanced by treatment with 0.5 mm vitamin C. Vitamin C also decreased intracellular reactive oxygen intermediates (ROI) levels that were increased by LL-37. Furthermore, the phosphorylation of ERK was analysed by Western blot following treatment with vitamin C and LL-37. Vitamin C turned off phosphorylation of ERK that was induced by LL-37. Ets-1 transcriptional factor, which is involved in the regulation of collagen expression by LL-37, was also inhibited by vitamin C. This study shows that vitamin C enhances collagen production by inhibiting the ERK pathway induced by LL-37.
Study Information
pubmed
2010
2010-08-01T00:00:00.000Z
10.1111/j.1600-0625.2010.01070.x
38
33