High-fluence light emitting diode-red light inhibits cell cycle progression in human dermal fibroblasts

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Abstract

Skin fibrosis is a debilitating feature of several systemic and dermatologic diseases. While current treatment options carry significant risk of side effects and recurrence, high-fluence light emitting diode-generated red light (LED-RL) is an alternative therapeutic that is safe, non-invasive, and accessible. We previously demonstrated LED-RL decreases fibroblast proliferation, a key pathogenic component of fibrosis. However, the cellular mechanism by which high fluence LED-RL modulates fibroblast proliferation is unclear. Herein, we explored the effects of high fluence LED-RL on human dermal fibroblast cell cycle progression. We demonstrate that LED-RL at 640 J/cm2 induced significant arrest of cells in G0/G1 compared to temperature-matched control. This was accompanied by a corresponding increase in expression of checkpoint regulator p53 in irradiated cells. These data demonstrate high fluence LED-RL may exert its anti-proliferative effect on fibroblasts by inducing G0/G1 arrest. Further, this study provides insight into the molecular mechanism underlying LED-RL as an anti-fibrotic therapeutic.

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Masub, N., Austin, E., Huang, A., & Jagdeo, J. (2021). High-fluence light emitting diode-red light inhibits cell cycle progression in human dermal fibroblasts. Journal of Biophotonics, 14(2). https://doi.org/10.1002/jbio.202000359

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