Photodegradation of Dibenzoylmethanes: Potential Cause of Photocontact Allergy to Sunscreens
Journal article, 2009

One of the most frequently observed photoallergens today is the sunscreen agent 4-tert-butyl-4′-methoxy dibenzoylmethane (1a). The structurally similar compound, 4-isopropyldibenzoylmethane (1b), was a common cause of sunscreen allergy in the eighties and early nineties but was removed from the market in 1993 and replaced with dibenzoylmethane 1a. We have studied the photodegradation of the dibenzoylmethane 1a, to better understand how these substances cause an immune reaction. Several expected degradation products were formed and identified. Of these, arylglyoxals and benzils were of particular interest because they were unexplored as potential contact allergens. The allergenic potential of photodegraded 1a was evaluated by screening the formed arylglyoxals and benzils for their sensitizing capacity in the murine local lymph node assay. The arylglyoxals were found to be strong sensitizers. They were also found to be highly reactive toward the nucleophile arginine, which indicates that the immunogenic hapten-protein complex could be formed via an electrophilic-nucleophilic pathway. By varying the electron-withdrawing or -donating capacity of the substituent in the para position of the arylglyoxal, the electronic effects were shown to have no significant impact on either the sensitizing or the electrophilic power of arylglyoxals. Thus, a change in the substitution pattern of the parent dibenzoylmethane will not influence the sensitizing capacity of the products formed from them upon photodegradation. Furthermore, the combined studies of benzils, using the local lymph node assay and a cell proliferation assay, indicate that the benzils are cytotoxic rather than allergenic. Taken together, this study presents strong indication that photocontact allergy to dibenzoylmethanes is caused by the arylglyoxals that are formed upon photodegradation.

sunscreens

photocontact allergy

benzils

local lymph node assay

photodegradation

photoallergen

arylglyoxals

dibenzoylmethanes

Author

I. Karlsson

University of Gothenburg

Lisa Hillerström

University of Gothenburg

Anna-Lena Stenfeldt

University of Gothenburg

Jerker Mårtensson

Chalmers, Chemical and Biological Engineering, Organic Chemistry

Anna Börje

University of Gothenburg

Chemical Research in Toxicology

0893-228X (ISSN) 1520-5010 (eISSN)

Vol. 22 11 1881-1892

Subject Categories

Dermatology and Venereal Diseases

Analytical Chemistry

Other Basic Medicine

Medicinal Chemistry

Microbiology in the medical area

Organic Chemistry

DOI

10.1021/tx900284e

More information

Created

10/8/2017