In clinical studies, the formation of facial wrinkles has been closely linked to the loss of elastic properties of the skin. Repetitive UVB irradiation of animal skin at suberythemal doses significantly reduces its elastic properties, resulting in the formation of wrinkles. That also elicits a marked alteration in the three-dimensional structure of elastic fibres, which is closely associated with a subsequent reduction in the elastic properties of the skin. While UVB irradiation stimulates the activity of skin fibroblast-derived elastase in the dermis, a synthetic inhibitor specific for skin fibroblast-derived elastase as well as an extract of Zingiber officinale (L.) Rose capable of inhibiting skin fibroblast-derived elastase, but not neutrophil elastase, prevented wrinkle formation in our studies of animal and human facial skin, respectively. The close interrelationship among wrinkle formation, elastic properties and elastic fibre linearity is revealed by the effects of different concentrations of the elastase inhibitor, which indicates that enhanced elastase activity by dermal fibroblasts plays a pivotal role in the UVB wrinkling mechanism. Fortunately, we were able to identify human skin fibroblast-derived elastase as the previously known enzyme neprilysin/neutral endopeptidase. Using both a UVB-conditioned medium assay and a co-culture system, we characterized the epithelial-mesenchymal interaction between keratinocytes and fibroblasts which leads to increased expression of neprilysin at the transcriptional, translational and enzymatic levels. Our results demonstrate that interleukin-1α and granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor are intrinsic cytokines secreted by UVB-exposed keratinocytes that stimulate the expression of neprilysin by skin fibroblasts.
Keywords: epithelial-mesenchymal interaction; fibroblasts; keratinocytes; neprilysin; skin fibroblasts elastase; ultraviolet B; wrinkling.
© 2016 John Wiley & Sons A/S. Published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.