Transcriptome analysis in mouse skin after exposure to ultraviolet radiation from a canopy sunbed
- DOI
- Language of the publication
- English
- Date
- 2024-02-05
- Type
- Article
- Author(s)
- Qutob, Sami S. Qutob
- Roesch, Samantha P.M.
- Smiley, Sandy
- Bellier, Pascale
- Williams, Andrew
- Cook, Kate B.
- Meier, Matthew J.
- Rowan-Carroll, Andrea
- Yauk, Carole L.
- McNamee, James P.
- Publisher
- Wiley
Abstract
Exposure to ultraviolet radiation (UV-R), from both natural and artificial tanning, heightens the risk of skin cancer by inducing molecular changes in cells and tissues. Despite established transcriptional alterations at a molecular level due to UV-R exposure, uncertainties persist regarding UV radiation characterization and subsequent genomic changes. Our study aimed to mechanistically explore dose- and time-dependent gene expression changes, that may drive short-term (e.g., sunburn) and long-term actinic (e.g., skin cancer) consequences. Using C57BL/6N mouse skin, we analyzed transcriptomic expression following exposure to five erythemally weighted UV-R doses (0, 5, 10, 20, and 40 mJ/cm2 ) emitted by a UV-R tanning device. At 96 h post-exposure, 5 mJ/cm2 induced 116 statistically significant differentially expressed genes (DEGs) associated with structural changes from UV-R damage. The highest number of significant gene expression changes occurred at 6 and 48 h post-exposure in the 20 and 40 mJ/cm2 dose groups. Notably, at 40 mJ/cm2 , 13 DEGs related to skin barrier homeostasis were consistently perturbed across all timepoints. UV-R exposure activated pathways involving oxidative stress, P53 signaling, inflammation, biotransformation, skin barrier maintenance, and innate immunity. This in vivo study's transcriptional data offers mechanistic insights into both short-term and potential non-threshold-dependent long-term health effects of UV-R tanning.
Plain language summary
Exposure of skin to ultraviolet radiation (UV-R) from natural and artificial tanning increases the risk of developing skin cancer. On a molecular level, UV-R causes changes in gene expression that can lead to short-term (e.g., sunburn) and long-term (e.g., skin cancer) adverse effects. This study examined the dose- and time-dependent changes in gene expression that may drive these effects. The researchers exposed mouse skin to five doses of UV-R and measured gene expression at six post-exposure durations. They found that even the lowest dose produced significant changes in gene expression related to structural changes associated with UV-R damage. The highest dose produced the largest number of significant changes in gene expression, which were related to oxidative stress, P53 signaling, inflammation, biotransformation, skin barrier maintenance, and innate immunity. This study provides mechanistic insight into the short-term and potential long-term health effects of exposure to UV-R tanning that may not be threshold dependent.
Subject
- Health,
- Health and safety