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Melatonin Exerts Prominent, Differential Epidermal and Dermal Anti-Aging Properties in Aged Human Eyelid Skin Ex Vivo

Human skin aging is associated with functional deterioration on multiple levels of physiology, necessitating the development of effective skin senotherapeutics. The well-tolerated neurohormone melatonin unfolds anti-aging properties in vitro and in vivo, but it remains unclear whether these effects...

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Autores principales: Samra, Tara, Gomez-Gomez, Tatiana, Linowiecka, Kinga, Akhundlu, Aysun, Lopez de Mendoza, Gabriella, Gompels, Matthew, Lee, Wendy W., Gherardini, Jennifer, Chéret, Jérémy, Paus, Ralf
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10647640/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37958946
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijms242115963
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author Samra, Tara
Gomez-Gomez, Tatiana
Linowiecka, Kinga
Akhundlu, Aysun
Lopez de Mendoza, Gabriella
Gompels, Matthew
Lee, Wendy W.
Gherardini, Jennifer
Chéret, Jérémy
Paus, Ralf
author_facet Samra, Tara
Gomez-Gomez, Tatiana
Linowiecka, Kinga
Akhundlu, Aysun
Lopez de Mendoza, Gabriella
Gompels, Matthew
Lee, Wendy W.
Gherardini, Jennifer
Chéret, Jérémy
Paus, Ralf
author_sort Samra, Tara
collection PubMed
description Human skin aging is associated with functional deterioration on multiple levels of physiology, necessitating the development of effective skin senotherapeutics. The well-tolerated neurohormone melatonin unfolds anti-aging properties in vitro and in vivo, but it remains unclear whether these effects translate to aged human skin ex vivo. We tested this in organ-cultured, full-thickness human eyelid skin (5–6 donors; 49–77 years) by adding melatonin to the culture medium, followed by the assessment of core aging biomarkers via quantitative immunohistochemistry. Over 6 days, 200 µM melatonin significantly downregulated the intraepidermal activity of the aging-promoting mTORC1 pathway (as visualized by reduced S6 phosphorylation) and MMP-1 protein expression in the epidermis compared to vehicle-treated control skin. Conversely, the transmembrane collagen 17A1, a key stem cell niche matrix molecule that declines with aging, and mitochondrial markers (e.g., TFAM, MTCO-1, and VDAC/porin) were significantly upregulated. Interestingly, 100 µM melatonin also significantly increased the epidermal expression of VEGF-A protein, which is required and sufficient for inducing human skin rejuvenation. In aged human dermis, melatonin significantly increased fibrillin-1 protein expression and improved fibrillin structural organization, indicating an improved collagen and elastic fiber network. In contrast, other key aging biomarkers (SIRT-1, lamin-B1, p16INK4, collagen I) remained unchanged. This ex vivo study provides proof of principle that melatonin indeed exerts long-suspected but never conclusively demonstrated and surprisingly differential anti-aging effects in aged human epidermis and dermis.
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spelling pubmed-106476402023-11-04 Melatonin Exerts Prominent, Differential Epidermal and Dermal Anti-Aging Properties in Aged Human Eyelid Skin Ex Vivo Samra, Tara Gomez-Gomez, Tatiana Linowiecka, Kinga Akhundlu, Aysun Lopez de Mendoza, Gabriella Gompels, Matthew Lee, Wendy W. Gherardini, Jennifer Chéret, Jérémy Paus, Ralf Int J Mol Sci Article Human skin aging is associated with functional deterioration on multiple levels of physiology, necessitating the development of effective skin senotherapeutics. The well-tolerated neurohormone melatonin unfolds anti-aging properties in vitro and in vivo, but it remains unclear whether these effects translate to aged human skin ex vivo. We tested this in organ-cultured, full-thickness human eyelid skin (5–6 donors; 49–77 years) by adding melatonin to the culture medium, followed by the assessment of core aging biomarkers via quantitative immunohistochemistry. Over 6 days, 200 µM melatonin significantly downregulated the intraepidermal activity of the aging-promoting mTORC1 pathway (as visualized by reduced S6 phosphorylation) and MMP-1 protein expression in the epidermis compared to vehicle-treated control skin. Conversely, the transmembrane collagen 17A1, a key stem cell niche matrix molecule that declines with aging, and mitochondrial markers (e.g., TFAM, MTCO-1, and VDAC/porin) were significantly upregulated. Interestingly, 100 µM melatonin also significantly increased the epidermal expression of VEGF-A protein, which is required and sufficient for inducing human skin rejuvenation. In aged human dermis, melatonin significantly increased fibrillin-1 protein expression and improved fibrillin structural organization, indicating an improved collagen and elastic fiber network. In contrast, other key aging biomarkers (SIRT-1, lamin-B1, p16INK4, collagen I) remained unchanged. This ex vivo study provides proof of principle that melatonin indeed exerts long-suspected but never conclusively demonstrated and surprisingly differential anti-aging effects in aged human epidermis and dermis. MDPI 2023-11-04 /pmc/articles/PMC10647640/ /pubmed/37958946 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijms242115963 Text en © 2023 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Samra, Tara
Gomez-Gomez, Tatiana
Linowiecka, Kinga
Akhundlu, Aysun
Lopez de Mendoza, Gabriella
Gompels, Matthew
Lee, Wendy W.
Gherardini, Jennifer
Chéret, Jérémy
Paus, Ralf
Melatonin Exerts Prominent, Differential Epidermal and Dermal Anti-Aging Properties in Aged Human Eyelid Skin Ex Vivo
title Melatonin Exerts Prominent, Differential Epidermal and Dermal Anti-Aging Properties in Aged Human Eyelid Skin Ex Vivo
title_full Melatonin Exerts Prominent, Differential Epidermal and Dermal Anti-Aging Properties in Aged Human Eyelid Skin Ex Vivo
title_fullStr Melatonin Exerts Prominent, Differential Epidermal and Dermal Anti-Aging Properties in Aged Human Eyelid Skin Ex Vivo
title_full_unstemmed Melatonin Exerts Prominent, Differential Epidermal and Dermal Anti-Aging Properties in Aged Human Eyelid Skin Ex Vivo
title_short Melatonin Exerts Prominent, Differential Epidermal and Dermal Anti-Aging Properties in Aged Human Eyelid Skin Ex Vivo
title_sort melatonin exerts prominent, differential epidermal and dermal anti-aging properties in aged human eyelid skin ex vivo
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10647640/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37958946
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijms242115963
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