“…Not surprisingly, there is great interest in pharmacological modulators of Nrf2 that could be developed into therapeutics for the treatment and prevention of disease (Buendia et al, ; Cuadrado et al, ; Dodson et al, ; Du et al, ; Gacesa et al, ; Kumar, Kim, More, Kim, & Choi, ; Lu, Ji, Jiang, & You, ; Rabbani, Ellison, et al, ; Sivandzade et al, ; Sklirou, Papanagnou, Fokialakis, & Trougakos, ; Sova & Saso, ; Vega, Dodson, Chapman, & Zhang, ; Yamamoto et al, ; Zhang et al, ), including skin disorders (Dodson et al, ; Ferrándiz, Nacher‐Juan, & Alcaraz, ; Gacesa et al, ; Kumar et al, ; Lu et al, ; Penta, Somashekar, & Meeran, ; Rabbani, Ellison, et al, ; Son et al, ; Yamamoto et al, ). Examples of natural products known to induce epigenetic Nrf2‐activating effects are shown in Figure (Bambouskova et al, ; Dodson et al, ; Fazzari et al, ; Fratantonio et al, ; Garaude, ; Gill, Raman, Yost, Garrett, & Vedam‐Mai, ; Gu et al, ; Iranshahy, Iranshahi, Abtahi, & Karimi, ; Irwin, Moos, Faller, Steliou, & Pinkert, ; Kumar et al, ; Li et al, ; Mathers et al, ; Matzinger, Fischhuber, & Heiss, ; Moos, Maneta, et al, ; Moos et al, ; Rigacci & Stefani, ; Rusu, Gheldiu, Mocan, Vlase, & Popa, ; Sivandzade et al, ; Steliou, Boosalis, Perrine, Sangerman, & Faller, ; Steliou, Faller, Pinkert, Irwin, & Moos, ; Tsujita et al, ). Some products are endogenously made, like the prostaglandins and l ‐carnitine as well as butyric, α‐lipoic, fumaric, itaconic, and the nitro‐fatty acids.…”