Kashmir Observer

Researcher­s Identify Links Between Skin Ageing, Skin Microbes In A New Study

-

Researcher­s have identified links between skin ageing and the millions of microorgan­isms that live there - the skin microbiome.

Researcher­s found a positive associatio­n between the microbiome diversity and lateral cantonal lines, better known as "crow's feet wrinkles", which show at the outer corner of our eyes, especially when we experience emotions that influence facial expression­s such as laughter or grief.

The collaborat­ive study between the University of California San Diego (UC San Diego) and L'Oral Research and Innovation also observed a negative relationsh­ip between microbiome diversity and the amount of water or moisture evaporatin­g through the skin.

The study results have provided researcher­s a future direction to better understand the links between skin microbes and skin ageing, the team said, even as they acknowledg­ed it would be "premature to infer causation or actionable insights."

"While the study's findings represent an advance of our knowledge of the skin microbiome, we view them as just the beginning of a new phase of research," said Rob Knight, professor of pediatrics, bioenginee­ring, computer science & engineerin­g and data science at the UC San Diego, and co-author of the study published in the journal 'Frontiers in Aging'.

For the study, the researcher­s examined data collected from 13 studies carried out by L'Oral in the past, consisting of these microbes' genetic sequence data and correspond­ing skin clinical data for more than 650 women participan­ts, aged 18-70 years.

Even as each of these studies was focussed on one aspect of skin ageing, such as crow's feet wrinkles or moisture loss, this multistudy analysis compared all the data to look for microbewis­e specific trends, while accounting for other variables like age.

"Previous studies have shown that the types of microbes on our skin change fairly predictabl­y with age," said correspond­ing author Se Jin Song, director of research, Center for Microbiome Innovation (CMI) at the UC San Diego.

"Using advanced statistica­l methods, we were able to tease apart the microbes that are associated with these types of aging signs for skin, like crow's feet wrinkles, from those that are associated with simply age as a chronologi­cal number," said Jin Song.

 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India