Sunscreens are topical preparations containing any number of ultraviolet filters (UVFs). The first part of the review will focus on the recent Food and Drug Administration (FDA) regulations of 2019 and general use of these agents. While sunscreen products are becoming more regulated in the United States, we still lag behind other countries in our options for UVFs. Sun protection to prevent skin cancer and aging changes should be a combination of sun avoidance, protective structures, and clothing as well as use of sunscreen products. Newer and safer products are needed to help supplement and replace older agents as well as improve their cosmetic acceptability. This will be a review of ingredients, local toxicities (i.e. contact dermatitis, photocontact dermatitis), special considerations for children, and cosmesis of sunscreen preparations. Part 2 will focus on the environmental, ecological and human toxicities that have been increasingly related to UVFs.
Spinocerebellar ataxia type 6 (SCA6) is a neurodegenerative disease that results from abnormal expansion of a polyglutamine (polyQ) repeat. SCA6 is caused by CAG triplet repeat expansion in the gene CACNA1A, resulting in a polyQ tract of 19-33 in patients. CACNA1A, a bicistronic gene, encodes the α1A calcium channel subunit and the transcription factor, α1ACT. PolyQ expansion in α1ACT causes degeneration in mice. We recently described the first Drosophila models of SCA6 that express α1ACT with a normal (11Q) or hyper-expanded (70Q) polyQ. Here, we report additional α1ACT transgenic flies, which express full-length α1ACT with a 33Q repeat. We show that α1ACT33Q is toxic in Drosophila, but less so than the 70Q version. When expressed everywhere, α1ACT33Q-expressing adults die earlier than flies expressing the normal allele. α1ACT33Q causes retinal degeneration and leads to aggregated species in an age-dependent manner, but at a slower pace than the 70Q counterpart. According to western blots, α1ACT33Q localizes less readily in the nucleus than α1ACT70Q, providing clues into the importance of polyQ tract length on α1ACT localization and its site of toxicity. We expect that these new lines will be highly valuable for future work on SCA6.
Background
Sunscreens are topical preparations containing one or more compounds that filter, block, reflect, scatter, or absorb ultraviolet (UV) light. Part 2 of this review focuses on the environmental, ecological effects and human toxicities that have been attributed to UV filters.
Methods
Literature review using NIH databases (eg, PubMed and Medline), FDA and EPA databases, Google Scholar, the
Federal Register
, and the
Code of Federal Regulations
(
CFR
).
Limitations
This was a retrospective literature review that involved many different types of studies across a variety of species. Comparison between reports is limited by variations in methodology and criteria for toxicity.
Conclusions
In vivo
and
in vitro
studies on the environmental and biological effects of UV filters show a wide array of unanticipated adverse effects on the environment and exposed organisms. Coral bleaching receives considerable attention from the lay press, but the scientific literature identifies potential toxicities of endocrine, neurologic, neoplastic and developmental pathways. These effects harm a vast array of aquatic and marine biota, while almost no data supports human toxicity at currently used quantities (with the exception of contact allergy). Much of these data are from experimental studies or field observations; more controlled environmental studies and long-term human use data are limited. Several jurisdictions have prohibited specific UV filters, but this does not adequately address the dichotomy of the benefits of photoprotection vs lack of eco-friendly, safe, and FDA-approved alternatives.
Hydrothermal synthesis has afforded a pair of divalent copper coordination polymers containing trans-1,4-cyclohexanedicarboxylate (t-14cdc) and one of two isomeric dipyridylamides, 3-pyridylnicotinamide (3-pna) or 3-pyridylisonicotinamide (3-pina). Both of these materials feature unprecedented 3-D topologies.8 2 layers featuring embedded anti-syn axial-equatorial bridged [Cu(OCO)] n chain motifs, pillared by anti-conformation 3-pna ligands into a new yet very simple binodal 3,5-connected (4•6•8)(4•6 6 •8 3 ) network topology. {[Cu 2 (t-14cdc) 2 (3-pina) 2 (H 2 O)]•5H 2 O} n (2) shows two different copper/t14cdc chain motifs with isolated copper ions and {Cu 2 O 2 } dimeric units, respectively. These are linked together by 3-pina ligands to afford a new self-penetrated 4,6-connected binodal net with (4•6 4 •8) 2 (4 2 •6 12 •8) topology. Variable temperature magnetic susceptibility experiments reveal very weak ferromagnetism (g = 2.01(1), J = 0.04(1) cm −1) along the [Cu(OCO)] n chains in 1 and weak antiferromagnetism (g = 1.906(3), J = −3.4(3) cm −1) within the {Cu 2 O 2 } dimeric units in 2. Thermal properties are also presented.
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