4.6 Editorial Material

Does melanin matter in the dark?

期刊

EXPERIMENTAL DERMATOLOGY
卷 26, 期 7, 页码 595-597

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/exd.13171

关键词

inflammation; keratinocytes; melanocytes; protection; toxicity

资金

  1. NIH [R21AR066505-01A1, 1R01AR056666-01A2]
  2. Cell-Mol-Tech (KNOW-the Leading National Research Center by Ministry of Science and Higher Education RP) [FBBB UJ 35p/10/2015]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

In living cells, melanin pigment is formed within melanosomes, which not only protect the cells from autodestruction, but also serve as second messenger organelles regulating important skin functions, with melanocytes acting as primary sensory and regulatory cells of the epidermis. Yet, one can argue that skin melanin, which may negatively affect cellular homeostasis in melanoma, really exerts protective functions. Consequently, the actual functions of melanin and the melanogenic pathway in skin biology remains enigmatic. Yet, the solution of this riddle seems simple - to check the actual influence of natural melanin on skin cells in the dark. Since many interesting hypotheses and theories put forward in this respect did not survive confrontation with the experiment, a leading pigment research group from Naples was brave to jump off the cliff by confronting theory with experimental reality. They showed that, in the dark, human hair-derived melanin promotes inflammatory responses in keratinocytes, lowers their viability, promotes oxidative stress, and that pheomelanin does so more strongly than eumelanin. Thus, pheomelanin hardly protects red-haired individuals, even when avoiding the sun. Black hairs do not do much better either, unless they undergo graying.

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