Improvement in Yield of Extracellular Vesicles Derived from Edelweiss Callus Treated with LED Light and Enhancement of Skin Anti-Aging Indicators

Curr Issues Mol Biol. 2023 Dec 16;45(12):10159-10178. doi: 10.3390/cimb45120634.

Abstract

The process of skin aging is currently recognized as a disease, and extracellular vesicles (EVs) are being used to care for it. While various EVs are present in the market, there is a growing need for research on improving skin conditions through microbial and plant-derived EVs. Edelweiss is a medicinal plant and is currently an endangered species. Callus culture is a method used to protect rare medicinal plants, and recently, research on EVs using callus culture has been underway. In this study, the researchers used LED light to increase the productivity of Edelweiss EVs and confirmed that productivity was enhanced by LED exposure. Additionally, improvements in skin anti-aging indicators were observed. Notably, M-LED significantly elevated callus fresh and dry weight, with a DW/FW ratio of 4.11%, indicating enhanced proliferation. Furthermore, M-LED boosted secondary metabolite production, including a 20% increase in total flavonoids and phenolics. The study explores the influence of M-LED on EV production, revealing a 2.6-fold increase in concentration compared to darkness. This effect is consistent across different plant species (Centella asiatica, Panax ginseng), demonstrating the universality of the phenomenon. M-LED-treated EVs exhibit a concentration-dependent inhibition of reactive oxygen species (ROS) production, surpassing dark-cultured EVs. Extracellular melanin content analysis reveals M-LED-cultured EVs' efficacy in reducing melanin production. Additionally, the expression of key skin proteins (FLG, AQP3, COL1) is significantly higher in fibroblasts treated with M-LED-cultured EVs. These results are expected to provide valuable insights into research on improving the productivity of plant-derived EVs and enhancing skin treatment using plant-derived EVs.

Keywords: LED; Leontopodium alpinum L.; extracellular vesicles; magenta; plant-derived EVs.

Grants and funding

This study did not receive external research funding, except from participating institutions (GFC Co., Ltd., Cosmecca Korea Co., Ltd.), each of which independently allocated research funds to their respective areas with pure intentions. There is no connection between these allocations. The authors disclose that GFC Co., Ltd. and Cosmecca Korea Co., Ltd. provided funding for this study. The involvement of each funder in the study was as follows: GFC Co., Ltd. (study design, data interpretation, article writing), Cosmecca Korea Co., Ltd. (data collection, analysis, decision to submit for publication).