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Dive into the research topics where Kayleigh A. Clarke is active.

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Featured researches published by Kayleigh A. Clarke.


British Journal of Nutrition | 2013

Oral green tea catechin metabolites are incorporated into human skin and protect against UV radiation-induced cutaneous inflammation in association with reduced production of pro-inflammatory eicosanoid 12-hydroxyeicosatetraenoic acid

Lesley E. Rhodes; Gemma Darby; Karen A. Massey; Kayleigh A. Clarke; Tristan P. Dew; Mark Farrar; S Bennett; Rachel E.B. Watson; Gary Williamson; Anna Nicolaou

Green tea catechins (GTC) reduce UV radiation (UVR)-induced inflammation in experimental models, but human studies are scarce and their cutaneous bioavailability and mechanism of photoprotection are unknown. We aimed to examine oral GTC cutaneous uptake, ability to protect human skin against erythema induced by a UVR dose range and impact on potent cyclo-oxygenase- and lipoxygenase-produced mediators of UVR inflammation, PGE2 and 12-hydroxyeicosatetraenoic acid (12-HETE), respectively. In an open oral intervention study, sixteen healthy human subjects (phototype I/II) were given low-dose GTC (540 mg) with vitamin C (50 mg) daily for 12 weeks. Pre- and post-supplementation, the buttock skin was exposed to UVR and the resultant erythema quantified. Skin blister fluid and biopsies were taken from the unexposed and the UVR-exposed skin 24 h after a pro-inflammatory UVR challenge (three minimal erythema doses). Urine, skin tissue and fluid were analysed for catechin content and skin fluid for PGE2 and 12-HETE by liquid chromatography coupled to tandem MS. A total of fourteen completing subjects were supplement compliant (twelve female, median 42.5 years, range 29-59 years). Benzoic acid levels were increased in skin fluid post-supplementation (P= 0.03), and methylated gallic acid and several intact catechins and hydroxyphenyl-valerolactones were detected in the skin tissue and fluid. AUC analysis for UVR erythema revealed reduced response post-GTC (P= 0.037). Pre-supplementation, PGE2 and 12-HETE were UVR induced (P= 0.003, 0.0001). After GTC, UVR-induced 12-HETE reduced from mean 64 (sd 42) to 41 (sd 32) pg/μl (P= 0.01), while PGE2 was unaltered. Thus, GTC intake results in the incorporation of catechin metabolites into human skin associated with abrogated UVR-induced 12-HETE; this may contribute to protection against sunburn inflammation and potentially longer-term UVR-mediated damage.


The American Journal of Clinical Nutrition | 2015

A randomized controlled trial of green tea catechins in protection against ultraviolet radiation–induced cutaneous inflammation,

Mark Farrar; Anna Nicolaou; Kayleigh A. Clarke; Sarah Mason; Karen A. Massey; Tristan P. Dew; Rachel E.B. Watson; Gary Williamson; Lesley E. Rhodes

Background: Safe systemic protection from the health hazards of ultraviolet radiation (UVR) in sunlight is desirable. Green tea is consumed globally and is reported to have anti-inflammatory properties, which may be mediated through the impact on cyclooxygenase and lipoxygenase pathways. Recent data suggest that green tea catechins (GTCs) reduce acute UVR effects, but human trials examining their photoprotective potential are scarce. Objective: We performed a double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled trial to examine whether GTCs protect against clinical, histologic, and biochemical indicators of UVR-induced inflammation. Design: Healthy adults (aged 18–65 y, phototypes I–II) were randomly allocated to 1350 mg encapsulated green tea extract (540 mg GTC) with 50 mg vitamin C or placebo twice daily for 3 mo. Impact on skin erythema, dermal leukocytic infiltration, and concentrations of proinflammatory eicosanoids was assessed after solar-simulated UVR challenge, and subject compliance was determined through assay of urinary GTC metabolite epigallocatechin glucuronide. Results: Volunteers were assigned to the active (n = 25) or the placebo (n = 25) group. After supplementation, median (IQR) sunburn threshold (minimal erythema dose) was 28 (20–28) and 20 (20–28) mJ/cm2 in the active and placebo groups, respectively (nonsignificant), with no difference in AUC analysis for measured erythema index after a geometric series of 10 UVR doses. Skin immunohistochemistry showed increased neutrophil and CD3+ T-lymphocyte numbers post-UVR in both groups (P < 0.01) with no statistically significant differences between groups after supplementation. Cyclooxygenase and lipoxygenase metabolites prostaglandin E2 (vasodilator) and 12-hydroxyeicosatetraenoicacid (chemoattractant), respectively, increased after UVR (P < 0.05), with no differences between supplementation groups. Conclusion: Oral GTC (1080 mg/d) with vitamin C over 3 mo did not significantly reduce skin erythema, leukocyte infiltration, or eicosanoid response to UVR inflammatory challenge. This trial was registered at clinicaltrials.gov as NCT01032031.


Journal of Nutritional Biochemistry | 2016

Green tea catechins and their metabolites in human skin before and after exposure to ultraviolet radiation.

Kayleigh A. Clarke; Tristan P. Dew; Rachel E.B. Watson; Mark Farrar; Joanne Osman; Anna Nicolaou; Lesley E. Rhodes; Gary Williamson

Dietary flavonoids may protect against sunburn inflammation in skin. Preliminary reports using less complete analysis suggest that certain catechins and their metabolites are found in skin biopsies and blister fluid after consumption of green tea; however, it is not known if they are affected by solar-simulated ultraviolet radiation (UVR) or whether conjugated forms, with consequently altered bioactivity, are present. The present study tested the hypothesis that UVR affects the catechin levels in the skin of healthy volunteers after consumption of green tea and how catechins in the plasma are related to their presence in skin tissue samples. In an open oral intervention study, 11 subjects consumed green tea and vitamin C supplements daily for 3 months. Presupplementation and postsupplementation plasma samples, suction blister fluid and skin biopsies were collected; the latter two samples were collected both before and after UVR. A sensitive high-performance liquid chromatography/mass spectrometric assay was used to measure the intact catechin metabolites, conjugates and free forms. Seven green tea catechins and their corresponding metabolites were identified postsupplementation in skin biopsies, 20 in blister fluid and 26 in plasma, with 15 green tea catechin metabolites present in both blister fluid and plasma. The valerolactone, O-methyl-M4-O-sulfate, a gut microbiota metabolite of catechins, was significantly increased 1.6-fold by UVR in blister fluid samples. In conclusion, there were some common catechin metabolites in the plasma and blister fluid, and the concentration was always higher in plasma. The results suggest that green tea catechins and metabolites are bioavailable in skin and provide a novel link between catechin metabolites derived from the skin and gut microbiota.


Journal of Chromatography B | 2014

High performance liquid chromatography tandem mass spectrometry dual extraction method for identification of green tea catechin metabolites excreted in human urine

Kayleigh A. Clarke; Tristan P. Dew; Rachel E.B. Watson; Mark Farrar; S Bennett; Anna Nicolaou; Lesley E. Rhodes; Gary Williamson


Journal of The American Academy of Dermatology | 2018

Oral green tea catechins do not provide photoprotection from direct DNA damage induced by higher dose solar simulated radiation: A randomized controlled trial

Mark Farrar; Raqib Huq; Sarah Mason; Anna Nicolaou; Kayleigh A. Clarke; Tristan P. Dew; Gary Williamson; Rachel E.B. Watson; Lesley E. Rhodes


In: 16th Congress of the European Society for Photobiology; 31 Aug 2015-04 Sep 2015; Aveiro, Portugal. 2015. | 2015

Impact of oral green tea catechins on UVR-induced inflammation in humans: a randomized controlled trial

Farrar; Anna Nicolaou; Kayleigh A. Clarke; Sarah Mason; Karen A. Massey; Tristan P. Dew; Rachel E.B. Watson; Gary Williamson; Lesley E. Rhodes


European Society for Dermatological Research | 2014

The effect of green tea catechin consumption on DNA damage markers in healthy human skin after UVR insult: A double-blinded randomised controlled trial

Raqib Huq; Sarah Mason; Mark Farrar; Barbara Shih; Kayleigh A. Clarke; Tristan P. Dew; Karen A. Massey; Anna Nicolaou; Gary Williamson; Rachel E.B. Watson; Lesley E. Rhodes


In: EuroFedLipid Congress ; 23 Sep 2012-26 Sep 2012; Cracow, Poland. . 2012. | 2012

Green tea catechins exhibit protective effects against UVR-induced skin inflammation in vivo and in relation to reduced levels of 12-HETE (oral presentation).

Anna Nicolaou; Karen A. Massey; G Darby; Tristan P. Dew; Kayleigh A. Clarke; Farrar; S Bennett; Reb Watson; Gary Williamson; Le Rhodes


In: 10th Euro Fed Lipid Congress; 23 Sep 2012-26 Sep 2012; Cracow, Poland. 2012. | 2012

Green tea catechins exhibit protective effects against UVR-induced skin inflammation in vivo and in relation to reduced levels of 12-HETE

Anna Nicolaou; Karen A. Massey; G Darby; Tristan P. Dew; Kayleigh A. Clarke; Farrar; S Bennett; Rachel E.B. Watson; Gary Williamson; Lesley E. Rhodes


In: 10th Congress of the International Society for the Study of Fatty Acids and Lipids; 26 May 2012-30 May 2012; Vancouver, Canada. 2012. | 2012

Green tea catechins attenuate the production of 12-HETE in human skin following exposure to ultraviolet radiation.

Karen A. Massey; G Darby; Tristan P. Dew; Kayleigh A. Clarke; S Bennett; Reb Watson; Gary Williamson; Le Rhodes; Anna Nicolaou

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Anna Nicolaou

University of Manchester

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Lesley E. Rhodes

Manchester Academic Health Science Centre

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Rachel E.B. Watson

Manchester Academic Health Science Centre

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S Bennett

Manchester Academic Health Science Centre

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Mark Farrar

Manchester Academic Health Science Centre

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Reb Watson

University of Manchester

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Sarah Mason

Manchester Academic Health Science Centre

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