Certain Strains Of Acne Bacteria May Actually Protect The
Skin
The bacteria that cause acne live on everyone's skin, yet
one in five people is lucky enough to develop only an
occasional pimple over a lifetime. What's the secret?
The results of a study published in the Feb. issue of the Journal of Investigative Dermatology
indicates that a strain of Propionibacterium acnes may contain
properties that protect the skin from harmful bacteria.
Investigators from the David Geffen School of Medicine at
University of California, Los Angeles, examined P. acnes bacteria from 49
patients with acne and 51 subjects with clear skin. After extracting microbial
DNA, researchers followed a genetic marker to identify bacterial strains and
assess whether the patient suffered from acne.
After UCLA researchers isolated more than 1,000 strains of
bacteria, scientists with Washington University sequenced genomes of 66 P.
acnes strains to enable researchers to then target genes unique to each
strain.
Two unique strains were found in one out of five patients
with acne, but these strains were rare in subjects with clear skin,
researchers noted. A third strain of P. acnes was common in healthy
skin, but was rarely found in those patients who had acne.
“We suspect that this strain contains a natural defense
mechanism that enables it to recognize attackers and destroy them before they
infect the bacterial cell,” said Huiying Li, Ph.D., assistant professor of
molecular and medical pharmacology at UCLA.
Investigators plan to next explore whether a probiotic cream
could block “bad” bacteria from invading the skin and help to prevent acne
breakouts.
Acne affects a majority of population at some point in their
lives, yet scientists know little about what causes the disorder and have made
limited progress in developing new strategies for treating it. Dermatologists'
arsenal of anti-acne tools — benzoyl peroxide, antibiotics and Accutane
(isotretinoin) — hasn't expanded in decades. Most severe cases of acne don't
respond to antibiotics, and Accutane can produce serious side effects we are in
a dire need of a new treatment option for acne in derma circles.
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