Mass. General-led study replicates tanning response in cultured human skin
Massachusetts General Hospital News Jun 17, 2017
Novel compounds activate pigmentation pathway without damaging UV radiation.
Investigators at Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH) and Dana–Farber Cancer Institute (DFCI) have developed a way of increasing pigmentation in human skin without the damaging effects of ultraviolet (UV) radiation. Their study, reported in the June 13 issue of the journal Cell Reports, is a follow–up to a 2006 study that identified the molecular pathways underlying the tanning response and induced tanning in a strain of mouse that normally does not produce the protective, dark form of melanin.
ÂThe activation of the tanning/pigmentation pathway by this new class of small molecules is physiologically identical to UV–induced pigmentation without the DNA–damaging effects of UV, says David E. Fisher, MD, PhD, chief of the Department of Dermatology at MGH who led both studies. ÂWe need to conduct safety studies, which are always essential with potential new treatment compounds, and better understand the actions of these agents. But itÂs possible they may lead to new ways of protecting against UV–induced skin damage and cancer formation.Â
In the 2006 study published in the journal Nature, FisherÂs team  then based at DFCI  used a topical compound called forskolin to induce tanning in a strain of red–haired mice, in which a genetic variant interrupts the pathway leading to production of melanin pigment. Forskolin activates a protein further down the pigmentation pathway, bypassing the interruption and inducing production of the protective dark pigment called eumelanin.
Subsequent testing in human skin samples of forskolin and a related compound with similar action was not successful, probably because human skin is around five times thicker than the skin of mice. This led the investigators to explore a different approach. Enzymes called salt–inducible kinases (SIKs) were known to regulate transcription of a protein even further down the pigmentation pathway, and inhibiting SIK expression had been shown by a research group in Japan to activate pigmentation in mice.
Initial experiments with a previously described SIK inhibitor produced marked tanning in the same strain of red–haired mice used in the 2006 study. Skin darkening increased with daily treatment, becoming virtually black within a few days, and gradually decreased after application was halted, just as a normal tan does. When that compound proved to have limited activity in human skin samples, likely due to limited penetration, FisherÂs group turned to colleagues in the DFCI laboratory of Nathanael Gray, PhD, a co–author of the current study.
A new class of small–molecule SIK inhibitors, developed by GrayÂs team and tested by FisherÂs, was found to be better able to penetrate cultured human skin samples and induce significant darkening following eight days of daily, topical administration. Microscopic examination of the treated skin samples confirmed that eumelanin pigment was produced and deposited near the skin surface in patterns typical to what is seen with UV–induced pigmentation/tanning, suggesting activation of the same pigmentation pathway.
ÂWe are excited about the possibility of inducing dark pigment production in human skin without a need for either systemic exposure to a drug or UV exposure to the skin, says Fisher, the Wigglesworth Professor of Dermatology at Harvard Medical School and director the MGH Cutaneous Biology Research Center (CBRC).
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Investigators at Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH) and Dana–Farber Cancer Institute (DFCI) have developed a way of increasing pigmentation in human skin without the damaging effects of ultraviolet (UV) radiation. Their study, reported in the June 13 issue of the journal Cell Reports, is a follow–up to a 2006 study that identified the molecular pathways underlying the tanning response and induced tanning in a strain of mouse that normally does not produce the protective, dark form of melanin.
ÂThe activation of the tanning/pigmentation pathway by this new class of small molecules is physiologically identical to UV–induced pigmentation without the DNA–damaging effects of UV, says David E. Fisher, MD, PhD, chief of the Department of Dermatology at MGH who led both studies. ÂWe need to conduct safety studies, which are always essential with potential new treatment compounds, and better understand the actions of these agents. But itÂs possible they may lead to new ways of protecting against UV–induced skin damage and cancer formation.Â
In the 2006 study published in the journal Nature, FisherÂs team  then based at DFCI  used a topical compound called forskolin to induce tanning in a strain of red–haired mice, in which a genetic variant interrupts the pathway leading to production of melanin pigment. Forskolin activates a protein further down the pigmentation pathway, bypassing the interruption and inducing production of the protective dark pigment called eumelanin.
Subsequent testing in human skin samples of forskolin and a related compound with similar action was not successful, probably because human skin is around five times thicker than the skin of mice. This led the investigators to explore a different approach. Enzymes called salt–inducible kinases (SIKs) were known to regulate transcription of a protein even further down the pigmentation pathway, and inhibiting SIK expression had been shown by a research group in Japan to activate pigmentation in mice.
Initial experiments with a previously described SIK inhibitor produced marked tanning in the same strain of red–haired mice used in the 2006 study. Skin darkening increased with daily treatment, becoming virtually black within a few days, and gradually decreased after application was halted, just as a normal tan does. When that compound proved to have limited activity in human skin samples, likely due to limited penetration, FisherÂs group turned to colleagues in the DFCI laboratory of Nathanael Gray, PhD, a co–author of the current study.
A new class of small–molecule SIK inhibitors, developed by GrayÂs team and tested by FisherÂs, was found to be better able to penetrate cultured human skin samples and induce significant darkening following eight days of daily, topical administration. Microscopic examination of the treated skin samples confirmed that eumelanin pigment was produced and deposited near the skin surface in patterns typical to what is seen with UV–induced pigmentation/tanning, suggesting activation of the same pigmentation pathway.
ÂWe are excited about the possibility of inducing dark pigment production in human skin without a need for either systemic exposure to a drug or UV exposure to the skin, says Fisher, the Wigglesworth Professor of Dermatology at Harvard Medical School and director the MGH Cutaneous Biology Research Center (CBRC).
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