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Protective Effects of Ocimum gratissimumAqueous Extracts on HaCaT Cells Against UVC-Induced Inhibition of Cell Viability and Migration

Ultraviolet C (UVC) has been applied to treatment of infections in wounds for at least the last two decades, however, cells being treated can be damaged if exposure is prolonged, which calls for protective measures, such as drug or herbal pre-treatment, to minimize damage. Ocimum gratissimum contain...

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Autores principales: Chang, Sheng-Huang, Liu, Jer-Yuh, Hsiao, Meen-Woon, Yang, Hsin‐Ling, Wang, Guan-Wei, Ye, Je-Chiuan
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Ivyspring International Publisher 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8040403/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33850479
http://dx.doi.org/10.7150/ijms.54644
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author Chang, Sheng-Huang
Liu, Jer-Yuh
Hsiao, Meen-Woon
Yang, Hsin‐Ling
Wang, Guan-Wei
Ye, Je-Chiuan
author_facet Chang, Sheng-Huang
Liu, Jer-Yuh
Hsiao, Meen-Woon
Yang, Hsin‐Ling
Wang, Guan-Wei
Ye, Je-Chiuan
author_sort Chang, Sheng-Huang
collection PubMed
description Ultraviolet C (UVC) has been applied to treatment of infections in wounds for at least the last two decades, however, cells being treated can be damaged if exposure is prolonged, which calls for protective measures, such as drug or herbal pre-treatment, to minimize damage. Ocimum gratissimum contains plant polyphenols such as isoflavones and caffeic acid, which have antioxidant effects. We hypothesize that Ocimum gratissimum aqueous extracts (OGE) can inhibit UVC-induced oxidative damage on skin cells. In this study, HaCaT skin cells are used to test the protective effects of OGE on cell proliferation and migration after exposure to UVC radiation. Pretreatment with OGE (50~150μg/mL) before 40 J/m(2) UVC exposure was able to restore survival from 32.25% to between 46.77% and 68.00%, and 80 J/m(2) UVC exposure from 11.49% to between 19.07% and 43.04%. Morphological observation of primarily apoptotic cell death confirms the above findings. The flow cytometry analysis revealed that UVC increased the number of cells at the sub-G1 phase in a dose dependent manner, and when pre-treated with OGE the changes were partially reversed. Moreover, the wound healing test for observing migration showed that UVC 40-80 J/m(2) decreased cell migration to 47-28% activity and 100 μg/mL OGE was able to restore cell activity to81-69% at day 3. Based on the above results, we suggest that OGE has a protective effect on UVC-induced inhibition of cell proliferation and migration of skin cells and thus has potential application in wound care.
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spelling pubmed-80404032021-04-12 Protective Effects of Ocimum gratissimumAqueous Extracts on HaCaT Cells Against UVC-Induced Inhibition of Cell Viability and Migration Chang, Sheng-Huang Liu, Jer-Yuh Hsiao, Meen-Woon Yang, Hsin‐Ling Wang, Guan-Wei Ye, Je-Chiuan Int J Med Sci Research Paper Ultraviolet C (UVC) has been applied to treatment of infections in wounds for at least the last two decades, however, cells being treated can be damaged if exposure is prolonged, which calls for protective measures, such as drug or herbal pre-treatment, to minimize damage. Ocimum gratissimum contains plant polyphenols such as isoflavones and caffeic acid, which have antioxidant effects. We hypothesize that Ocimum gratissimum aqueous extracts (OGE) can inhibit UVC-induced oxidative damage on skin cells. In this study, HaCaT skin cells are used to test the protective effects of OGE on cell proliferation and migration after exposure to UVC radiation. Pretreatment with OGE (50~150μg/mL) before 40 J/m(2) UVC exposure was able to restore survival from 32.25% to between 46.77% and 68.00%, and 80 J/m(2) UVC exposure from 11.49% to between 19.07% and 43.04%. Morphological observation of primarily apoptotic cell death confirms the above findings. The flow cytometry analysis revealed that UVC increased the number of cells at the sub-G1 phase in a dose dependent manner, and when pre-treated with OGE the changes were partially reversed. Moreover, the wound healing test for observing migration showed that UVC 40-80 J/m(2) decreased cell migration to 47-28% activity and 100 μg/mL OGE was able to restore cell activity to81-69% at day 3. Based on the above results, we suggest that OGE has a protective effect on UVC-induced inhibition of cell proliferation and migration of skin cells and thus has potential application in wound care. Ivyspring International Publisher 2021-03-12 /pmc/articles/PMC8040403/ /pubmed/33850479 http://dx.doi.org/10.7150/ijms.54644 Text en © The author(s) https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/). See http://ivyspring.com/terms for full terms and conditions.
spellingShingle Research Paper
Chang, Sheng-Huang
Liu, Jer-Yuh
Hsiao, Meen-Woon
Yang, Hsin‐Ling
Wang, Guan-Wei
Ye, Je-Chiuan
Protective Effects of Ocimum gratissimumAqueous Extracts on HaCaT Cells Against UVC-Induced Inhibition of Cell Viability and Migration
title Protective Effects of Ocimum gratissimumAqueous Extracts on HaCaT Cells Against UVC-Induced Inhibition of Cell Viability and Migration
title_full Protective Effects of Ocimum gratissimumAqueous Extracts on HaCaT Cells Against UVC-Induced Inhibition of Cell Viability and Migration
title_fullStr Protective Effects of Ocimum gratissimumAqueous Extracts on HaCaT Cells Against UVC-Induced Inhibition of Cell Viability and Migration
title_full_unstemmed Protective Effects of Ocimum gratissimumAqueous Extracts on HaCaT Cells Against UVC-Induced Inhibition of Cell Viability and Migration
title_short Protective Effects of Ocimum gratissimumAqueous Extracts on HaCaT Cells Against UVC-Induced Inhibition of Cell Viability and Migration
title_sort protective effects of ocimum gratissimumaqueous extracts on hacat cells against uvc-induced inhibition of cell viability and migration
topic Research Paper
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8040403/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33850479
http://dx.doi.org/10.7150/ijms.54644
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