Company Profile
What's New
Product Information
Applications Info
Tech Reference List
Information Request
Contact Us
Careers
Email Newsletter
Frequently Asked Questions
In Vitro Basics
In Vitro Toxicology Testing (Non-Animal Safety Testing)
Nanoparticle Research Using MatTek Human Tissue Constructs
Site Map
Search




MatTek Corporation
200 Homer Avenue
Ashland, MA  01721
508-881-6771
FAX:  508-879-1532
E-mail Us

Reproducibility Guaranteed!
Front page
Search

Category: Technical References, EpiDerm

119. UVB IRRADIATION OF AN ORGANOTYPIC SKIN MODEL, EPIDERM™, RESULTS IN SIGNIFICANT RELEASE OF CYTOKINES.


Klausner, M., Kubilus, J., Ricker, H.A., Neal, P. J. MatTek Corp. The Toxicologist, 15(1)., Soc. of Toxicology, Reston VA. Abstract #1745 (1995).

Summary:
Ultraviolet light, especially UVB (290-320 nm), is believed to be responsible for most of the immediate and long term effects of excessive exposure to sunlight. In many cases, the initial stages of these UV induced changes are the release of cytokines. Although cytokine release from human keratinocytes in monolayer cultures following UV exposure has been studied, the results of UVB exposure to keratinocytes in fully differentiated epidermal models have not been adequately delineated.

UVB irradiation of EpiDerm™, a commercially available, highly differentiated model of the human epidermis, resulted in significant increases in PGE2 and IL-1α, even at UV fluxes which were not cytotoxic, as determined using the MTT viability assay. At UVB does of up to 100 mj/cm2, MTT viability remained at or above 100% whereas PGE2 and IL-1α release increased to 3.4 and 2.7 fold of baseline cytokine levels, respectively.

Hence, EpiDerm may prove to be a useful tool in understanding the immunological and inflammatory reactions associated with UV irradiation and other related skin pathologies.

====================

Request an Electronic Copy (PDF format) of this Technical Paper

====================

EpiDerm Data Sheet

EpiDerm Specifications

EpiDerm Technical References


Applications: Cancer research, Cytokine expression/analysis, Inflammation - skin, Phototoxicity, Sunscreens, UV radiation

Keywords: Cancer, Cytokines, Cytotoxicity, Endpoints, MTT, EpiDerm, Inflammation, Inflammatory, Inflammatory reactions, MTT, MTT ET-50 tissue viability assay, MTT assay, Phototoxicity, Sun screens, UVA, UVB, Ultra-violet radiation (UV), Viability



Top