4.1 Article

Edible bird's nest extract downregulates epidermal apoptosis and helps reduce damage by ultraviolet radiation in skin of hairless mice

Journal

JOURNAL OF CLINICAL BIOCHEMISTRY AND NUTRITION
Volume 70, Issue 1, Pages 33-36

Publisher

JOURNAL CLINICAL BIOCHEMISTRY & NUTRITION
DOI: 10.3164/jcbn.21-54

Keywords

apoptosis; edible bird's nest extract; skin damage; superoxide dismutase; ultraviolet

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The present study aimed to investigate whether daily intake of edible bird's nest extract can reduce ultraviolet-induced damage to the skin. The results showed that the extract enhanced the expression of superoxide dismutase 2 and reduced apoptosis in the epidermis, which helped in reducing skin damage.
The purpose of the present study was to examine whether daily intake of edible bird's nest extract reduced ultraviolet-induced damage to skin. Twenty-one female HR-1/Hos mice were divided into control (C, n = 7), low-dose (2 mg/kg body weight/day of edible bird's nest extract) (L. n = 7), and high-dose (20 mg/kg body weight/day of edible bird's nest extract) (H, n = 7) groups. With their left back skin covered with aluminum sheet to prevent exposure, mice were radiated with either ultraviolet A (20 J/cm(2)) or ultraviolet B (40 mJ/cm(2)) in an alternate manner once daily for 10 weeks. They were gavaged either a solution of saline or edible bird's nest extract every day. The moisture content of the ultraviolet-exposed right back skin was significantly higher in H than in C or L. Histochemical analysis showed that the number of apoptotic epidermal cells on the ultraviolet-exposed skin was significantly lower in L and H than in C. In H, the mRNA expression of superoxide dismutase 2 was significantly higher on ultraviolet-exposed skin than on unexposed skin. Our data suggested that edible bird's nest extract enhanced superoxide dismutase 2 expression and downregulated apoptosis in their epidermis, which likely helped reduce skin damage.

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