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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Free Radicals and Extrinsic Skin Aging

Borut Poljšak, +1 more
- 29 Feb 2012 - 
- Vol. 2012, pp 135206-135206
TLDR
The most important strategy to reduce the risk of sun UVR damage is to avoid the sun exposure and the use of sunscreens and to use exogenous antioxidants orally or by topical application in preventing oxidative stress and in enhanced DNA repair.
Abstract
Human skin is constantly directly exposed to the air, solar radiation, environmental pollutants, or other mechanical and chemical insults, which are capable of inducing the generation of free radicals as well as reactive oxygen species (ROS) of our own metabolism. Extrinsic skin damage develops due to several factors: ionizing radiation, severe physical and psychological stress, alcohol intake, poor nutrition, overeating, environmental pollution, and exposure to UV radiation (UVR). It is estimated that among all these environmental factors, UVR contributes up to 80%. UV-induced generation of ROS in the skin develops oxidative stress, when their formation exceeds the antioxidant defence ability of the target cell. The primary mechanism by which UVR initiates molecular responses in human skin is via photochemical generation of ROS mainly formation of superoxide anion ( O 2 − • ) , hydrogen peroxide (H 2O 2), hydroxyl radical ( O H • ), and singlet oxygen ( 1 O 2 ) . The only protection of our skin is in its endogenous protection (melanin and enzymatic antioxidants) and antioxidants we consume from the food (vitamin A, C, E, etc.). The most important strategy to reduce the risk of sun UVR damage is to avoid the sun exposure and the use of sunscreens. The next step is the use of exogenous antioxidants orally or by topical application and interventions in preventing oxidative stress and in enhanced DNA repair.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Reactive oxygen species (ROS) and cancer: Role of antioxidative nutraceuticals

TL;DR: This review considers the role of ROS in the various stages of cancer development and provides evidence that nutraceuticals derived from Mother Nature are highly effective in eliminating cancer cells.
Journal ArticleDOI

Oxidative Stress in Aging Human Skin

TL;DR: In this review the overall effects of oxidative stress are discussed as well as the sources of ROS including the mitochondrial ETC, peroxisomal and ER localized proteins, the Fenton reaction, and such enzymes as cyclooxygenase, lipoxygenases, xanthine oxidases, and NADPH oxidases.
Book ChapterDOI

Ultraviolet Light Induced Generation of Reactive Oxygen Species.

TL;DR: It is therefore important to protect yourself against the potentially harmful effects of UV light as it can lead to pathological UV-induced ROS production.
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Ultraviolet radiation, aging and the skin: prevention of damage by topical cAMP manipulation.

TL;DR: This review will focus on the theoretical use of forskolin, a plant-derived pharmacologically active compound to protect the skin against UV injury and prevent aging symptoms by up-regulating melanin production.
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Skin aging and oxidative stress: Equol's anti-aging effects via biochemical and molecular mechanisms.

TL;DR: The main focus of this review covers the characteristics of equol (phytoestrogenic, antioxidant and enhancement of extracellular matrix properties) to reduce skin aging along with its anti-aging skin influences via reducing oxidative stress cascade events by a variety of biochemical/molecular actions and mechanisms to enhance human dermal health.
References
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Book ChapterDOI

I and J

Book

Free radicals in biology and medicine

TL;DR: 1. Oxygen is a toxic gas - an introduction to oxygen toxicity and reactive species, and the chemistry of free radicals and related 'reactive species'
Journal ArticleDOI

An introduction to free radical biochemistry

TL;DR: Reactive free radicals formed within cells can oxidise biomolecules and lead to cell death and tissue injury, and establishing the involvement of free radicals in the pathogenesis of a disease is extremely difficult due to the short lifetimes of these species.
Journal ArticleDOI

Redox activation of Fos‐Jun DNA binding activity is mediated by a DNA repair enzyme.

TL;DR: A novel link between transcription factor regulation, oxidative signalling and DNA repair processes in higher eukaryotes is suggested and Ref‐1 is the major AP‐1 redox activity in Hela nuclear extracts.
Journal ArticleDOI

AP-1 transcriptional activity is regulated by a direct association between thioredoxin and Ref-1

TL;DR: It is proved that TRX can associate directly with Ref-1 in the nucleus and the requirement of cysteine residues in the TRX catalytic center for the potentiation of AP-1 activity is demonstrated.
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