Liarozole inhibits human epidermal retinoic acid 4-hydroxylase activity and differentially augments human skin responses to retinoic acid and retinol in vivo

S Kang, E A Duell, K J Kim, J J Voorhees, S Kang, E A Duell, K J Kim, J J Voorhees

Abstract

Metabolic inactivation of all-trans retinoic acid to 4-hydroxy retinoic acid occurs via a cytochrome P-450 enzyme. We investigated the effects of liarozole on the retinoic acid 4-hydroxylase activity of human epidermis and its ability to modify in vivo human skin responses to retinoic acid and all-trans retinol. Retinoic acid 4-hydroxylase activity induced in vivo by 4 d treatment with retinoic acid (0.1%) was inhibited in vitro by liarozole in a concentration-dependent manner. Comparable micromolar concentrations of liarozole were extracted from stratum corneum-free epidermis treated with 3% liarozole. Retinoic acid levels in liarozole-treated skin increased to 19 +/- 5 ng/g wet wt (mean +/- SEM, p < 0.002, n = 17) at 18 h and to 6 +/- 2 ng/g wet wt (p = 0.38, n = 17) at 48 h as compared to vehicle (not detectable). At 48 h, retinoic acid 4-hydroxylase activity was induced 9-fold over vehicle (p < 0.03, n = 8). At 96 h, no significant erythema or increased epidermal thickness was found when either retinoic acid (0.001%), all-trans retinol (0.0250%), or liarozole (3%) was applied individually, but when 0.001% retinoic acid and 3% liarozole were applied together, both erythema and increased epidermal thickness occurred. In contrast, 0.025% all-trans retinol and 3% liarozole together caused increased epidermal thickness but no erythema. These data demonstrate that, at doses used here, liarozole, although an effective inhibitor of retinoic acid 4-hydroxylase, cannot function alone like a retinoid in vivo, probably because of retinoic acid 4-hydroxylase induction. In the presence of a low dose retinoic acid or all-trans retinol, however, liarozole can amplify human skin responses to each retinoid in a manner characteristic of the retinoid at a higher dose (erythema and hyperplasia with retinoic acid; no erythema but hyperplasia with all-trans retinol).

Source: PubMed

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