4.6 Article

Gender differences in UV-induced skin inflammation, skin carcinogenesis and systemic damage

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ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.etap.2020.103512

Keywords

Ultraviolet; Inflammation; Skin cancer; Gender; Nuclear transcription factor-kappa B

Funding

  1. Guangzhou University of Chinese Medicine Young Talent Project [QNYC20170106]

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Male mice are more prone to skin tumor development induced by UV radiation compared to female mice, and they are more sensitive to UV irradiation, leading to greater oxidative stress and inflammatory damage.
Ultraviolet (UV) radiation-induced chronic inflammation contributes to all stages of skin tumor development. In addition, gender plays an important role in inflammatory diseases or cancer. In this study, histopathology changes, hematology, oxidative stress and inflammatory response were used to evaluate sex differences in UV-induced chronic inflammation-associated cancer development. The results showed that the male and female mice had photoaging damage at the 9th week. However, skin tumors only appeared in male mice at 31st week. Furthermore, UV increased ROS production, p65, p-p65, IL-6 and TNE-alpha protein expressions in skin, and these factors elevated more in male mouse model. Hematology results showed that the parameters of blood systemic inflammation were changed in different degrees in model groups, while the pathological results showed inflammatory cell infiltration in the internal organs of both model groups in varying degrees. These results indicate that there are gender differences in UV-induced skin inflammation, carcinogenesis and systemic damage. Moreover, male mice are more sensitive to UV irradiation, which may be responsible to greater oxidative stress and inflammatory damage.

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