About this Research Topic
Natural products including diet- and plant-derived phytochemicals have gained remarkable attention as promising candidates for effective photoprotective agents due to their antioxidant properties. Antioxidant phytochemicals are abundantly present in plant-based diets and are active ingredients in several medicinal herbs. Several studies have revealed that some herbal extracts and phytochemicals have abilities to inhibit UVR-mediated upregulation of MMPs including MMP-1 through an antioxidant mechanism involving Nrf2 signaling. Thus, we would like to bring together experts from related disciplines to discuss the role of natural antioxidants in photoaging and photocarcinogenesis through regulation of antioxidant defense system that would provide insight into development of effective pharmacological approaches to photoprotection against UVR-induced skin damage.
Important Notes
General:
- Positive and negative controls - Lack of positive and negative controls are not acceptable.
-Irrelevant or implausible models - The relevance and plausibility of a model system from which results of a study are being derived must be carefully considered. This includes consideration of the value and ethical implications of further in vivo studies which replicate previously published results in well studied species.
Chemical:
- Composition of the study material - Manuscripts relating to crude plant extracts, where an individual active agent or a detailed phytochemical characterization of all extracts is not clearly identified and quantified are not acceptable. The composition of the study material must be described adequately.
- Composition of the study material - Where ‘pure’ compounds are used the level of purity must be reported.
- Irrelevant dose ranges - Testing extracts at implausibly high doses is not acceptable.
- Antioxidant activity - Simple in silico and pharmacologically irrelevant assays for antioxidant activity (e.g. the DPPH assay, FRAP (Ferric Reducing Ability of Plasma), ABTS (2,2'-azinobis-(3-ethylbenzothiazoline-6-sulfonic acid)) are not acceptable as a main tool for assessing an extract or a compound for activity.
Botanical:
- The identification of the study material needs to be defined well. All species should be fully validated using www.theplantlist.org orhttp://mpns.kew.org/mpns-portal/.
- Full botanical documentation is essential (i.e. a voucher specimen deposited in a recognized herbarium).
Keywords: antioxidant, oxidative stress, photoaging, photocarcinogenesis, ultraviolet
Important Note: All contributions to this Research Topic must be within the scope of the section and journal to which they are submitted, as defined in their mission statements. Frontiers reserves the right to guide an out-of-scope manuscript to a more suitable section or journal at any stage of peer review.