Photoprotection conferred by low level summer sunlight exposures against pro-inflammatory UVR insult

Felton, S.J. and Shih, B.B. and Watson, R.E.B. and Kift, R. and Webb, A.R. and Rhodes, L.E. (2020) Photoprotection conferred by low level summer sunlight exposures against pro-inflammatory UVR insult. Photochemical and Photobiological Sciences, 19 (6). pp. 810-818. ISSN 1474-905X

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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.

Item Type:
Journal Article
Journal or Publication Title:
Photochemical and Photobiological Sciences
Uncontrolled Keywords:
/dk/atira/pure/subjectarea/asjc/1600/1606
Subjects:
?? physical and theoretical chemistry ??
ID Code:
192112
Deposited By:
Deposited On:
19 May 2023 14:30
Refereed?:
Yes
Published?:
Published
Last Modified:
15 Jul 2024 23:45