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Toxicology | 2003

UV-induced skin damage

Masamitsu Ichihashi; Masato Ueda; Arief Budiyanto; Toshinori Bito; Masahiro Oka; Mizuho Fukunaga; Kenta Tsuru; Tatsuya Horikawa

Solar radiation induces acute and chronic reactions in human and animal skin. Chronic repeated exposures are the primary cause of benign and malignant skin tumors, including malignant melanoma. Among types of solar radiation, ultraviolet B (290-320 nm) radiation is highly mutagenic and carcinogenic in animal experiments compared to ultraviolet A (320-400 nm) radiation. Epidemiological studies suggest that solar UV radiation is responsible for skin tumor development via gene mutations and immunosuppression, and possibly for photoaging. In this review, recent understanding of DNA damage caused by direct UV radiation and by indirect stress via reactive oxygen species (ROS) and DNA repair mechanisms, particularly nucleotide excision repair of human cells, are discussed. In addition, mutations induced by solar UV radiation in p53, ras and patched genes of non-melanoma skin cancer cells, and the role of ROS as both a promoter in UV-carcinogenesis and an inducer of UV-apoptosis, are described based primarily on the findings reported during the last decade. Furthermore, the effect of UV on immunological reaction in the skin is discussed. Finally, possible prevention of UV-induced skin cancer by feeding or topical use of antioxidants, such as polyphenols, vitamin C, and vitamin E, is discussed.


Journal of Dermatological Science | 2002

Characterization of dermatitis arising spontaneously in DS-Nh mice maintained under conventional conditions: another possible model for atopic dermatitis

Ichiro Hikita; Takeshi Yoshioka; Tsuyoshi Mizoguchi; Kiyoshi Tsukahara; Kenta Tsuru; Hiroshi Nagai; Tsutomu Hirasawa; Yuji Tsuruta; Ryuji Suzuki; Masamitsu Ichihashi; Tatsuya Horikawa

DS-Nh (DS Nh/+) mice spontaneously develop dermatitis when they are housed in a conventional environment. In this study, we analyzed the clinical and histopathological features of dermatitis in DS-Nh mice, which is characterized by erythema, edema, and erosion on the face, neck, chest and flexor surfaces of their forelegs with marked scratching behavior. Histopathological examination, including immunohistochemistry, revealed that inflammatory cells consisting of mast cells, eosinophils, CD4-positive T cell-dominant lymphocytes and CD11b-positive macrophages infiltrated the skin lesions. The cytokine production pattern of inflammatory cells in a lesional skin tissue was shifted to the Th2-type (IL-4) rather than the Th1 type (IFN-gamma). Serum IgE levels were elevated and correlated with the severity of the clinical skin conditions. These skin symptoms were observed in association with a colonization of Staphylococcus aureus. Similar clinical and histopathological symptoms were inducible with repeated percutaneous immunization of heat-killed S. aureus on the back of SPF DS-Nh mice. These results suggest that the spontaneous dermatitis that occurs in conventionally raised DS-Nh mice is comparable to a certain type of human atopic dermatitis (AD), which is associated with S. aureus, a recognized environmental factor. Thus, we consider that DS-Nh mice offer a useful model for investigating the pathogenesis of AD and for developing new therapeutic approaches or drugs for treating AD.


British Journal of Dermatology | 2002

Localized heat urticaria in a patient is associated with a wealing response to heated autologous serum.

Atsushi Fukunaga; Shinichi Shimoura; Mizuho Fukunaga; Masato Ueda; Hiroshi Nagai; Toshinori Bito; Kenta Tsuru; Masamitsu Ichihashi; Tatsuya Horikawa

Summary We report a case of localized heat urticaria in a 71‐year‐old woman who developed weals and loss of consciousness after taking a bath. Exposing her skin to heat at 40 °C or immersing her hands in water at 40 °C produced urticarial lesions and increased her plasma histamine level. Desensitization with hot water improved her symptoms and normalized her plasma histamine level after heat challenge. An intracutaneous injection of her serum produced no reaction, while an injection of her serum that had been heated at 40 °C for 15 min induced a weal flare response. Further examination revealed that the weal‐inducing activity of her heated serum remained for at least for 6 h and that treatment of her serum at 60 °C for 2 h did not abrogate its weal‐inducing activity. These findings indicate that certain materials in her serum that are activated by heat are responsible for the development of her anaphylactic and urticarial reactions and that these reactions may be mediated by histamine.


Journal of Dermatological Science | 2001

Low-dose ultraviolet B radiation synergizes with TNF-α to induce apoptosis of keratinocytes

Kenta Tsuru; Tatsuya Horikawa; Arief Budiyanto; Ichiro Hikita; Masato Ueda; Masamitsu Ichihashi

High-dose ultraviolet B (UVB) irradiation is known to induce apoptosis of keratinocytes, but low-dose UVB dose not. In this paper we present evidence that low-dose UVB can induce TNF-alpha-dependent apoptosis of keratinocytes. In our study, 5 mJ/cm(2) doses of UVB were not sufficient by themselves to induce apoptosis of cultured human keratinocytes, but 20 mJ/cm(2) doses of UVB were. The combination of 5 mJ/cm(2) doses of UVB and exogenous TNF-alpha (15 ng/ml) induced significant apoptosis of keratinocytes, although exogenous TNF-alpha without UVB did not. This phenomenon was accompanied by enhanced clustering of tumor necrosis factor receptor 1 (TNFR1). TNF-alphas promotion of the induction of apoptosis by low-dose UVB was seen until 30 min after irradiation but not at 1 h. We confirmed this finding using a skin organ culture system. UVB (20 mJ/cm(2)), which did not induce transformation of epidermal keratinocytes into sunburn cells, induced apoptosis when TNF-alpha was added to the culture medium. These results suggest that one of the possible mechanisms of inducing keratinocyte apoptosis by low-dose UVB and TNF-alpha is that low-dose UVB augments ligand-binding-induced TNFR1 clustering, resulting in increased apoptotic cell death.


Journal of Dermatology | 2004

A Case of Generalized Hair Follicle Hamartoma Associated with Systemic Lupus Erythematosus

Kenta Tsuru; Akiko Ohashi; Masato Ueda

A hair‐follicle hamartoma (HFH) may be localized or diffuse. Generalized HFH is frequently associated with an autoimmune disease such as myasthenia gravis or systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE). We report here a female patient with SLE who developed typical generalized HFH. This is the fourth case of generalized HFH associated with SLE.


The Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology | 2005

Responsiveness to autologous sweat and serum in cholinergic urticaria classifies its clinical subtypes

Atsushi Fukunaga; Toshinori Bito; Kenta Tsuru; Akiko Oohashi; Xijun Yu; Masamitsu Ichihashi; Chikako Nishigori; Tatsuya Horikawa


Acta Dermato-venereologica | 2000

Hypercalcemia of malignancy associated with trichilemmal carcinoma in burn scar.

Ikeda T; Kenta Tsuru; Hayashi K; Masamitsu Ichihashi; Masato Ueda


Skin Cancer | 1999

A case of malignant melanoma in ulcerated part undergoed subtotal integumentectomy.

Kazuhiro Hayashi; Masato Veda; Miyoko Matsumura; Toshihiro Takai; Kenta Tsuru; Masamitsu Ichihashi


Journal of Dermatological Science | 1998

Role of TNF- α in sunburn cell formation in a skin organ culture system

Kenta Tsuru; Fumio Washio; Koichi Nakagawa; Tatsuya Horikawa; Masato Ueda; Masamitsu Ichihashi


Journal of Dermatological Science | 1998

A transient inhibitory effect of UVB irradiation on the tumor rejection by locally secreted IL-12

Tatsuya Horikawa; Hiroshi Nagai; Kenta Tsuru; Isao Hara; M. Ichihashi

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