UV increases skin-derived 1α,25-dihydroxyvitamin D production, leading to MMP-1 expression by altering the balance of vitamin D and cholesterol synthesis from 7-dehydrocholesterol.
Clicks: 227
ID: 28093
2019
The skin is a unique site in the human body that has the capacity to synthesize the active form of vitamin D, 1α,25-dihydroxyvitamin D (1α,25(OH)D), from 7-dehydrocholesterol (7DHC) upon UV irradiation. Keratinocytes express both 25-hydroxylase (CYP27A1 and CYP2R1) and 1α-hydroxylase (CYP27B1), critical enzymes involved in active vitamin D synthesis. Here, we investigated the effect of skin-derived 1α,25(OH)D, synthesized purely within the keratinocytes, on MMP-1 expression. Treatment of human epidermal keratinocytes with 1α,25(OH)D but not 7DHC or 25OHD, significantly increased MMP-1 expression. UV irradiation increases 1α,25(OH)D levels, and ketoconazole inhibits UV-induced production of 1α,25(OH)D. Upregulation of MMP-1 by UV was reversed by inhibition of 1α,25(OH)D synthesis using ketoconazole or CYP27B1 siRNA. In keratinocytes, 7DHC is a substrate for both cholesterol and 1α,25(OH)D synthesis. We demonstrated that UV irradiation leads to decreased expression of DHCR7 (7-dehydrocholesterol reductase), the enzyme that converts 7DHC to cholesterol. Inhibition of DHCR7 with its inhibitor BM15766 decreased cholesterol synthesis and increased UV-induced MMP-1 expression, which was attenuated by ketoconazole. These findings suggest that UV-induced reduction of DHCR7 leads to a decrease in cholesterol synthesis, thereby increasing 7DHC availability for 1α,25(OH)D production, which enhances MMP-1 expression. Finally, UV irradiation in human skin in vivo significantly increased CYP27B1 mRNA and decreased DHCR7 mRNA expression. Taken together, we demonstrate here that skin-derived 1α,25(OH)D significantly increases MMP-1 expression in human keratinocytes, a previously unappreciated function of 1α,25(OH)D Moreover, UV irradiation upregulates the enzyme CYP27B1, which leads to 1α,25(OH)D synthesis, but downregulates the cholesterol-producing enzyme DHCR7, both of which collectively lead to increased MMP-1 expression in human keratinocytes. This pathway may be exploited to develop a novel cutaneous anti-aging agent that blocks local cutaneous 1α,25(OH)D synthesis.
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shin2019uvthe
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Authors | Shin, Mi Hee;Lee, Yuri;Kim, Min-Kyoung;Lee, Dong Hun;Chung, Jin Ho; |
Journal | the journal of steroid biochemistry and molecular biology |
Year | 2019 |
DOI | S0960-0760(19)30227-4 |
URL | |
Keywords | Keywords not found |
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