Health & Wellbeing

Scientists developing drug that could prevent sun-related aging of skin

Scientists developing drug that could prevent sun-related aging of skin
The "tanning bed for mice" used in the research
The "tanning bed for mice" used in the research
View 1 Image
The "tanning bed for mice" used in the research
1/1
The "tanning bed for mice" used in the research

Excessive exposure to sunlight is the leading cause of skin deterioration, causing it to age prematurely. We need some exposure, however, in order to synthesize vitamin D – plus who wants to stay in the shade all the time? Using a good sunscreen definitely helps, although scientists from the University of British Columbia are taking things a step farther – they're developing a drug that could ultimately prevent the sunlight-related aging of skin.

The discovery was made unintentionally.

A team led by UBC's Prof. David Granville started out investigating the role that an enzyme known as granzyme B may play in atherosclerosis and heart attacks. Granzyme B occurs naturally in the body, although excessive levels of it have been linked to various autoimmune diseases and the destruction of collagen.

In this case, the scientists were interested in seeing if mice lacking the enzyme were more resistant to the hardening and narrowing of blood vessels. Along the way, however, they noticed that those mice had much smoother, more youthful skin than animals with normal amounts of granzyme B.

The researchers then proceeded to put both types of mice in a sunlight-simulating carousel that exposed them to ultraviolet light for three to four minutes, three times a week – enough to cause redness, but not to cause serious burns. After 20 weeks of repeated exposure, the skin of granzyme B-less mice was in much better shape, and retained significantly more collagen than that of the other group.

Granville is now developing a topically-applied drug to inhibit granzyme B activity, through UBC spin-off company viDA Therapeutics. Plans call for the medication to be tested within two years on test subjects with discoid lupus erythematosus, an autoimmune disease that causes facial scarring and is made worse by exposure to sunlight.

If it proves effective with that group, it may ultimately find use in the form of lotion that anyone can apply, to keep the sun from aging their skin. A non-topical version could also find use treating conditions such as aneurysms and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, which are caused by the breakdown of collagen in blood vessels and lung passages.

A paper on the research was recently published in the journal Aging Cell.

Source: UBC

2 comments
2 comments
Peter Jennings
Does anyone else see the irony in UBC coming up with a tanning cream.
You will notice they had to use artificial light to expose the mice to sunshine.
Outdoors, they may not have been able to get 10-12 minutes a week.
:)
Ralf Biernacki
Do they have any idea what the mechanism behind the effect is? Because if there was an unmixed benefit to just knocking out a particular enzyme, natural selection would have done it eons ago. It's an easy mutation, making something not work. But it was not selected for. Why?