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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: William Cvammen, Michael G. Kemp
Format: Artículo Open Access
Published: Wiley 2024
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Online Access:https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/php.13930
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author William Cvammen
Michael G. Kemp
author_facet William Cvammen
Michael G. Kemp
William Cvammen
Michael G. Kemp
collection Wiley Open Access
contents The REV‐ERB antagonist SR8278 modulates keratinocyte viability in response to UVA and UVB radiation William Cvammen Michael G. Kemp Photochemistry and Photobiology AbstractThe nucleotide excision repair (NER) system removes UV photoproducts from genomic DNA and is controlled by the circadian clock. Given that small‐molecule compounds have been developed to target various clock proteins, we examined whether the cryptochrome inhibitor KS15 and REV‐ERB antagonist SR8278 could modulate keratinocyte responses to UV radiation in vitro. We observed that though SR8278 promoted cell viability in UVB‐irradiated cells, it had little effect on NER or on the expression of the clock‐regulated NER factor XPA. Rather, we found that both KS15 and SR8278 absorb light within the UV spectrum to limit initial UV photoproduct formation in DNA. Moreover, SR8278 promoted UVB viability even in cells in which the core circadian clock protein BMAL1 was disrupted, which indicates that SR8278 is likely acting via other REV‐ERB transcriptional targets. We further observed that SR8278 sensitized keratinocytes to light sources containing primarily UVA wavelengths of light likely due to the generation of toxic reactive oxygen species. Though other studies have demonstrated beneficial effects of SR8278 in other model systems, our results here suggest that SR8278 has limited utility for UV photoprotection in the skin and will likely cause phototoxicity in humans or mammals exposed to solar radiation. 10.1111/php.13930 http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/
doi_str_mv 10.1111/php.13930
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license_str_mv http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/
publishDate 2024
publisher Wiley
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spellingShingle The REV‐ERB antagonist SR8278 modulates keratinocyte viability in response to UVA and UVB radiation
William Cvammen
Michael G. Kemp
Photochemistry and Photobiology
The REV‐ERB antagonist SR8278 modulates keratinocyte viability in response to UVA and UVB radiation William Cvammen Michael G. Kemp Photochemistry and Photobiology AbstractThe nucleotide excision repair (NER) system removes UV photoproducts from genomic DNA and is controlled by the circadian clock. Given that small‐molecule compounds have been developed to target various clock proteins, we examined whether the cryptochrome inhibitor KS15 and REV‐ERB antagonist SR8278 could modulate keratinocyte responses to UV radiation in vitro. We observed that though SR8278 promoted cell viability in UVB‐irradiated cells, it had little effect on NER or on the expression of the clock‐regulated NER factor XPA. Rather, we found that both KS15 and SR8278 absorb light within the UV spectrum to limit initial UV photoproduct formation in DNA. Moreover, SR8278 promoted UVB viability even in cells in which the core circadian clock protein BMAL1 was disrupted, which indicates that SR8278 is likely acting via other REV‐ERB transcriptional targets. We further observed that SR8278 sensitized keratinocytes to light sources containing primarily UVA wavelengths of light likely due to the generation of toxic reactive oxygen species. Though other studies have demonstrated beneficial effects of SR8278 in other model systems, our results here suggest that SR8278 has limited utility for UV photoprotection in the skin and will likely cause phototoxicity in humans or mammals exposed to solar radiation. 10.1111/php.13930 http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/
title The REV‐ERB antagonist SR8278 modulates keratinocyte viability in response to UVA and UVB radiation
topic Photochemistry and Photobiology
url https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/php.13930