Marine Drugs (Feb 2022)

Mitigative Effects of PFF-A Isolated from <i>Ecklonia cava</i> on Pigmentation in a Zebrafish Model and Melanogenesis in B16F10 Cells

  • Jun-Geon Je,
  • Yunfei Jiang,
  • Jun-Ho Heo,
  • Xining Li,
  • You-Jin Jeon,
  • Bo-Mi Ryu

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/md20020123
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 20, no. 2
p. 123

Abstract

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Melanin synthesis is a defense mechanism that prevents skin damage, but excessive accumulation of melanin occurs in the skin in various reactions such as pigmentation, lentigines, and freckles. Although anti-melanogenic effects have been demonstrated for various naturally occurring marine products that inhibit and control tyrosinase activity, most studies have not been extended to in vivo applications. Phlorofucofuroeckol-A (PFF-A, 12.5–100 µM) isolated from Ecklonia cava has previously been shown to have tyrosinase-mitigative effects in B16F10 cells, but it has not been evaluated in an in vivo model, and its underlying mechanism for anti-melanogenic effects has not been studied. In the present study, we evaluated the safety and efficacy of PFF-A for anti-melanogenic effects in an in vivo model. We selected low doses of PFF-A (1.5–15 nM) and investigated their mitigative effects on pigmentation stimulated by α-MSH in vivo and their related-mechanism in an in vitro model. The findings suggest that low-dose PFF-A derived from E. cava suppresses pigmentation in vivo and melanogenesis in vitro. Therefore, this study presents the possibility that PFF-A could be utilized as a new anti-melanogenic agent in the cosmeceutical industries.

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