Atopic Dermatitis: a Short Summary
- Not all consumers developed white blotching after applying rhododendrol (rhododenol)-containing products
- All treatment areas didn’t necessarily develop white blotchingThe authors performed cell cultures on normal human melanocytes
- Results
- high doses (1500micromol and 3000micromol) had a cytotoxic effect
- apoptosis was observed at 3000micromol (through activation of caspase 3)
- low doses of 300-900micromol inhibited melanogenesis (downregulation of tyrosinase, Pmel17, MITF, Melan A)
- low doses activate the autophagy lysosome pathway in melanocytes (LAMP1) (revealed by fuorescence after marking Rhododenol and Bafilycin 1)
- (electron microscopy showed a reduced number of melanosomes and an increased number of lysosomes)
- high doses (1500micromol and 3000micromol) had a cytotoxic effect
Explanation: autophagy induction attenuates rhododenol induced cytotoxicity in melanocytes
Comment: this study shows that rhododenol (rhododendrol) toxicity appears to happen at higher doses and non-cytotoxic lysosomal activation is a protective mechanism. This might also explain why progressive repigmentation occurs as another study presented at this meeting suggests (Inoue M. et al.)
Contributors
Dr Christophe Hsu – dermatologist. Geneva, Switzerland
Source of information: Yang L. et al. Rhododendrol activates autophagy-lysosome pathway in melanocytes: a potential mechanism for skin depigmentation disorder aussi . JSID Annual Meeting (Japanese Society of Investigative Dermatology, 日本研究皮膚科学会) 2014 – Osaka, Japan
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