International Journal of Molecular Sciences (Sep 2022)

Transcriptome Analysis of Particulate Matter 2.5-Induced Abnormal Effects on Human Sebocytes

  • Hye-Won Na,
  • Hyun Soo Kim,
  • Hyunjung Choi,
  • Nari Cha,
  • Young Rok Seo,
  • Yong Deog Hong,
  • Hyoung-June Kim

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms231911534
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 23, no. 19
p. 11534

Abstract

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Particulate matter 2.5 (PM2.5), an atmospheric pollutant with an aerodynamic diameter of 2.5 on sebocytes. We examined the role of PM2.5 via the identification of differentially expressed genes, functional enrichment and canonical pathway analysis, upstream regulator analysis, and disease and biological function analysis through mRNA sequencing. Xenobiotic and lipid metabolism, inflammation, oxidative stress, and cell barrier damage-related pathways were enriched; additionally, PM2.5 altered steroid hormone biosynthesis and retinol metabolism-related pathways. Consequently, PM2.5 increased lipid synthesis, lipid peroxidation, inflammatory cytokine expression, and oxidative stress and altered the lipid composition and expression of factors that affect cell barriers. Furthermore, PM2.5 altered the activity of sterol regulatory element binding proteins, mitogen-activated protein kinases, transforming growth factor beta-SMAD, and forkhead box O3-mediated pathways. We also suggest that the alterations in retinol and estrogen metabolism by PM2.5 are related to the damage. These results were validated using the HairSkin® model. Thus, our results provide evidence of the harmful effects of PM2.5 on sebocytes as well as new targets for alleviating the skin damage it causes.

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