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Review
. 2016;12(4):377-88.
doi: 10.1517/17425255.2016.1149569. Epub 2016 Feb 17.

Metabolic and redox barriers in the skin exposed to drugs and xenobiotics

Affiliations
Review

Metabolic and redox barriers in the skin exposed to drugs and xenobiotics

Liudmila Korkina. Expert Opin Drug Metab Toxicol. 2016.

Abstract

Introduction: Growing exposure of human skin to environmental and occupational hazards, to numerous skin care/beauty products, and to topical drugs led to a biomedical concern regarding sustainability of cutaneous chemical defence that is essential for protection against intoxication. Since skin is the largest extra-hepatic drug/xenobiotic metabolising organ where redox-dependent metabolic pathways prevail, in this review, publications on metabolic processes leading to redox imbalance (oxidative stress) and its autocrine/endocrine impact to cutaneous drug/xenobiotic metabolism were scrutinised.

Areas covered: Chemical and photo-chemical skin barriers contain metabolic and redox compartments: their protective and homeostatic functions. The review will examine the striking similarity of adaptive responses to exogenous chemical/photo-chemical stressors and endogenous toxins in cutaneous metabolic and redox system; the role(s) of xenobiotics/drugs and phase II enzymes in the endogenous antioxidant defence and maintenance of redox balance; redox regulation of interactions between metabolic and inflammatory responses in skin cells; skin diseases sharing metabolic and redox problems (contact dermatitis, lupus erythematosus, and vitiligo)

Expert opinion: Due to exceptional the redox dependence of cutaneous metabolic pathways and interaction of redox active metabolites/exogenous antioxidants with drug/xenobiotic metabolism, metabolic tests of topical xenobiotics/drugs should be combined with appropriate redox analyses and performed on 3D human skin models.

Keywords: AhR; GST; Nrf2; contact dermatitis; photo-chemical barrier; redox signalling; skin antioxidants; skin xenobiotic/drug metabolising enzymes; vitiligo.

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