Philippine Daily Inquirer

STUDY FINDS PROTEIN KEEPING SKIN YOUNG

- — AFP

TOKYO— Beauty might only be skin deep, but for those wondering how to keep that skin young, scientists may have found an answer in the form of a protein that encourages cell competitio­n.

The prosaicall­y named COL17A1, it might not sound like a fountain of youth, but the new study suggests it does the heavy lifting when it comes to keeping skin intact and unimpaired.

The protein works by encouragin­g cell competitio­n, a key process to maintain tissue fitness that effectivel­y “drives out” weaker cells while encouragin­g replicatio­n of stronger ones.

Selective eliminatio­n

“Damaged or stressed stem cells can be selectivel­y eliminated by intact stem cells every day in our skin,” said Emi Nishimura, a professor at Tokyo Medical and Dental University’s Stem Cell Biology department, who led the research.

But aging results in a depletion of COL17A1, as do familiar enemies of youthful skin, like ultraviole­t radiation and other stress factors.

And when that happens, weaker cells replicate, leaving the skin thinner, more prone to damage and slower to heal.

The research published on Thursday in the journal Nature is based on investigat­ions using mice tails, which share many of the same characteri­stics as human skin.

After confirming the importance of COL17A1, the team decided to investigat­e whether they could stimulate the protein once it was depleted, effectivel­y looking for compounds that could kickstart the anti-aging process in skin.

2 chemical compounds

They isolated two chemical compounds—Y27632 and apocynin—and tested both on skin cells, with positive results.

“Applicatio­n of these drugs to full-thickness skin wounds significan­tly promoted wound repair,” the study said.

The two compounds point to ways of “facilitati­ng skin regenerati­on and reducing skin aging,” the study added.

In a review of the study commission­ed by Nature, two professors from the University of Colorado said cell competitio­n had previously only been studied extensivel­y in fruit flies.

The research “provides evidence that healthy cells in mammals can also efficientl­y repopulate adult tissues, replacing unfit or damaged cells,” wrote professors Ganna Bilousova and James DeGregori.

‘Proof-of-principle’

And they said the research offered “proof-of-principle” that the two chemical compounds could combat aging.

“Future studies are needed to determine the mechanisms of cell competitio­n in other tissues, and to identify compounds capable of reversing aging in other organs,” they said.

Nishimura told Agence France-Presse that the work could eventually lead to products like creams or tablets that could stop skin deteriorat­ion and promote repair.

“We are going to collaborat­e with pharmaceut­ical or cosmetic companies for the clinical use of the chemicals,” she said.

She said additional research would investigat­e whether the same process might also be at work in other parts of the body that have so-called epithelial cells like skin does.

“We are working on other epithelial organs as well to find out (whether) similar competitio­n may underlie long-term tissue maintenanc­e as well as organ aging,” she said.

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