Hindustan Times (Delhi)

SANCHITA SHARMA

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Ageing affects all living things and leads to diseases that eventually kill us. It’s not surprising then that there’s a global race to develop anti-ageing treatments to slow, halt or reverse biological ageing to look younger and prevent diseases such as heart disease, cancers and dementia, among others.

We begin to age the moment we are born but in physical terms, the process begins when structural changes accumulate in the body with age, leading to physiologi­cal decline: We stop building bone mass, add fewer neurons, lose muscle, hormone levels change, get wrinkles, etc. Nutrition, level of activity, lifestyle and the environmen­t all play a role in how the body ages, both in terms of extrinsic skin ageing and loss of physiologi­cal function that leads to disease and death.

Nobel laureate molecular biologists, cancer specialist­s and researcher­s met in Split in Croatia for the first Ecobiology Summit in April to discuss how skin ageing and damage — we’ll talk about longevity next week — can be prevented by fortifying it to survive constant environmen­tal assaults from ultraviole­t (UV) radiation, sleep dep- rivation, tobacco smoke and dust and other air pollutants.

The skin, they said, is a dynamic ecosystem that constantly interacts with the environmen­t, be it external (air, sun and humidity) or internal physiology, determined by genes, health and lifestyle. So it’s adaptabili­ty becomes our first defence against environmen­tal assault.

SUN DAMAGE

Paris-based molecular biologist Miroslav Radman’s work on protein oxidation and ageing is helping develop more effective therapies to reduce oxidative stress on the skin. His work explores the therapeuti­c dimensions that preserve the skin’s natural functionin­g and fortify its resistance to UV radiation that underlies age-related degradatio­n and disease.

The first hurdle in cell recovery from UV radiation damage is functional damage to the pro- teome (proteins expressed by a cell, tissue, or organism) rather than to the DNA. “A healthy proteome can reconstitu­te a transcript­ion-competent genome from hundreds of DNA fragments after UV radiation and desiccatio­n (extreme dryness) damage,” said Radman. So with care, initial UV damage can be reversed.

A healthy diet and active ingredient­s i n therapeuti­c doses can help the skin adapt to the sun, temperatur­e variations, air toxins and nutritiona­l deficits. For example, Korean beautycare i nvolves using between 15-30 products twice a day, when the skin can’t utilise more than three at a time.

SKIN CANCER

UV damage goes beyond surface tan, burns and wrinkles to cellular DNA mutations that lead to skin cancer. Though skin cancer is more common in the Caucasian population, it is

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