4.5 Article

Inorganic and organic UV filters: Their role and efficacy in sunscreens and suncare product

Journal

INORGANICA CHIMICA ACTA
Volume 360, Issue 3, Pages 794-802

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE SA
DOI: 10.1016/j.ica.2005.12.057

Keywords

sunscreens; inorganic UV filters; organic UV filters; photostability of sunscreens; modified TiO2; effect of TiO2 on DNA

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Minerals such as titanium dioxide, TiO2, and zinc oxide, ZnO, are well known active semiconductor photocatalysts used extensively in heterogeneous photocatalysis to destroy environmental pollutants that are organic in nature, They are also extensively used in sunscreen lotions as active broadband sunscreens that screen both UVB (290-320 nm) and UVA (320-400 nm) sunlight radiation and as high SPF makers. When so photoactivated by UV light, however, these two particular metal oxides are known to generate highly oxidizing radicals (-OH and O-2(-.)) and other reactive oxygen species (ROS) such as H2O2 and singlet oxygen, O-1(2), which are known to be cytotoxic and/or genotoxic. Hydroxyl ((OH)-O-.) radicals photogenerated from photoactive TiO2 specimens extracted from commercial sunscreen lotions [R. Dunford, A. Salinaro, L. Cai, N. Serpone, S. Horikoshi, H. Hidaka, J. Knowland, FEBS Lett. 418 (1997) 87] induce damage to DNA plasmids in vitro and to whole human skin cells in cultures. Accordingly, the titanium dioxide particle surface was modified to produce TiO2 specimens of considerably reduced photoactivity. Deactivation of TiO2 diminishes considerably, in some cases completely suppresses damage caused to DNA plasmids, to human cells, and to yeast cells compared to non-modified specimens exposed to UVB/ UVA simulated solar radiation. The photostabilities of sunscreen organic active agents in neat polar and apolar solvents and in actual commercial formulations have been examined [N. Serpone, A. Salinaro, A.V. Emeline, S. Horikoshi, H. Hidaka, J. Zhao, Photochem. Photobiol. Sci. 1 (2002) 9701. With rare exceptions, the active ingredients undergo photochemical changes (in some cases form free radicals) and the sunscreen lotions lose considerable Sun protection efficacy only after a relatively short time when exposed to simulated sunlight UVB/UVA radiation, confirming the recent findings by Sayre et al. [R.M. Sayre, J.C. Dowdy, A.J. Gerwig, W.J. Shields, RN. Lloyd, Photochem. Photobiol. 81 (2005) 4521. (c) 2006 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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