Tuesday, July 19, 2022

Europe’s climate in 2050

If you are still on the fence about climate change? Your fence is on fire! www.blackcoralinc.org
This video explains why melanin is the most valuable substance on earth and why there is a race to produce artificial melanin for Europe!The current 2022 cost of Melanin is $450.00 a gram! That is enough to dye one strand of hair black. Since 2012 scientists have been searching for a way to make melanin which is what protects black and brown people from UV radiation and scientists may have found a new way to block these dangerous rays: melanin-imitating nanoparticles that protect skin cells from within. If proved, this approach could be used to develop better skin protection for people not blessed with melanin and possibly treatments for certain skin disorders  like vitiligo or rosacea as well.

The darkening pigment melanin or Eumelanin is one of the body's primary natural defenses against UV-induced DNA damage. Melanin is found in every organ of the body and is especially important in brain and nerve function as their are several types of melanin (Mela meaning black from the Greek word Melas or Melanos) Below the skin's surface, special cells secrete melanosomes, which produce, store and transport melanin. These structures are absorbed by skin cells called keratinocytes and form protective, UV-blocking shells around the cells' nuclei.Many people without the natural protection of Eumelanin are highly susceptible to the adverse effects of UV.

To create synthetic versions of these melanosomes, researchers at the University of California, San Diego, bathed dopamine—a signaling chemical found in the brain and other parts of the body—in an alkaline solution. This step produced melaninlike nanoparticles with shells and cores made of polydopamine, a dopamine-based polymer. When incubated in a petri dish with human keratinocytes, the synthetic particles were absorbed by the skin cells and distributed around their nuclei like natural melanin.

The cells “are able to process [the synthetic nanoparticle] and then convert it into a sort of cap over the nucleus,” says study author Nathan Gianneschi, a biochemist now at Northwestern University. Like melanin, the synthetic material also functions as a pigment to darken skin, but “it wasn't that it just filled the cells and made them darker,” he says. “It actually structured them.”

Not only were the melaninlike nanoparticles transported and distributed throughout skin cells like natural melanin—they also protected the cells' DNA. The researchers incubated skin cells with nanoparticles and then exposed them to UV radiation for three days. Fifty percent of the skin cells that absorbed the nanoparticles survived, compared with just 10 percent of those without nanoparticles. The findings were published  in 2017 by ACS Central Science.

Now that the team knows the melaninlike nanoparticles are treated the same as natural melanin and effectively protect cells, the next and most difficult step will be determining the absorption mechanism.

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