Department of Pharmacology and Toxicology, College of Pharmacy and UA Cancer Center, University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ, USA; UA Cancer Center, University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ, USA.
UA Cancer Center, University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ, USA.
Redox Biol. 2021 Sep;45:102042. doi: 10.1016/j.redox.2021.102042. Epub 2021 Jun 11.
Hypochlorous acid (HOCl) is the active oxidizing principle underlying drinking water disinfection, also delivered by numerous skin disinfectants and released by standard swimming pool chemicals used on a global scale, a topic of particular relevance in the context of the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic. However, the cutaneous consequences of human exposure to HOCl remain largely unknown, posing a major public health concern. Here, for the first time, we have profiled the HOCl-induced stress response in reconstructed human epidermis and SKH-1 hairless mouse skin. In addition, we have investigated the molecular consequences of solar simulated ultraviolet (UV) radiation and HOCl combinations, a procedure mimicking co-exposure experienced for example by recreational swimmers exposed to both HOCl (pool disinfectant) and UV (solar radiation). First, gene expression elicited by acute topical HOCl exposure was profiled in organotypic human reconstructed epidermis. Next, co-exposure studies (combining topical HOCl and UV) performed in SKH-1 hairless mouse skin revealed that the HOCl-induced cutaneous stress response blocks redox and inflammatory gene expression elicited by subsequent acute UV exposure (Nos2, Ptgs2, Hmox1, Srxn1), a finding consistent with emerging clinical evidence in support of a therapeutic role of topical HOCl formulations for the suppression of inflammatory skin conditions (e.g. atopic dermatitis, psoriasis). Likewise, in AP-1 transgenic SKH-1 luciferase-reporter mice, topical HOCl suppressed UV-induced inflammatory signaling assessed by bioluminescent imaging and gene expression analysis. In the SKH-1 high-risk mouse model of UV-induced human keratinocytic skin cancer, topical HOCl blocked tumorigenic progression and inflammatory gene expression (Ptgs2, Il19, Tlr4), confirmed by immunohistochemical analysis including 3-chloro-tyrosine-epitopes. These data illuminate the molecular consequences of HOCl-exposure in cutaneous organotypic and murine models assessing inflammatory gene expression and modulation of UV-induced carcinogenesis. If translatable to human skin these observations provide novel insights on molecular consequences of chlorination stress relevant to environmental exposure and therapeutic intervention.
次氯酸(HOCl)是饮用水消毒的活性氧化原理,也被许多皮肤消毒剂所采用,并由全球范围内使用的标准游泳池化学品释放,这在当前 COVID-19 大流行的背景下是一个特别相关的话题。然而,人类暴露于 HOCl 后的皮肤后果在很大程度上仍然未知,这是一个主要的公共卫生关注点。在这里,我们首次对重建人体表皮和 SKH-1 无毛小鼠皮肤中的 HOCl 诱导的应激反应进行了分析。此外,我们还研究了模拟模拟太阳紫外线(UV)辐射和 HOCl 组合的分子后果,这一过程模拟了例如暴露于 HOCl(游泳池消毒剂)和 UV(太阳辐射)的娱乐性游泳者所经历的共同暴露。首先,我们在器官型人重建表皮中对急性局部 HOCl 暴露引起的基因表达进行了分析。接下来,在 SKH-1 无毛小鼠皮肤中进行的共暴露研究(同时暴露于局部 HOCl 和 UV)表明,HOCl 诱导的皮肤应激反应阻止了随后急性 UV 暴露引起的氧化还原和炎症基因表达(Nos2、Ptgs2、Hmox1、Srxn1),这一发现与支持局部 HOCl 制剂在抑制炎症性皮肤疾病(如特应性皮炎、银屑病)方面具有治疗作用的新兴临床证据一致。同样,在 AP-1 转基因 SKH-1 荧光素酶报告小鼠中,通过生物发光成像和基因表达分析,局部 HOCl 抑制了 UV 诱导的炎症信号。在 SKH-1 高风险 UV 诱导人类角质形成细胞皮肤癌小鼠模型中,局部 HOCl 阻断了肿瘤发生进展和炎症基因表达(Ptgs2、Il19、Tlr4),免疫组织化学分析包括 3-氯酪氨酸表位得到了证实。这些数据阐明了在评估炎症基因表达和调节 UV 诱导的致癌作用的皮肤器官型和小鼠模型中 HOCl 暴露的分子后果。如果这些观察结果可以转化为人类皮肤,那么它们将为与环境暴露和治疗干预相关的氯化应激的分子后果提供新的见解。