Scientists Find the Molecule that Makes Sunburns Hurt—And a Way to Block it | 80beats

What’s the News: Researchers have pinpointed the molecule that makes sunburned skin so sensitive to pain, they reported yesterday in Science Translational Medicine. This finding could help scientists develop new painkillers not only for sunburn, but for chronically painful conditions such as arthritis.

How the Heck:

The researchers exposed small patches of skin on rat’s paws and the forearms of ten human participants to UVB radiation, the ultraviolet rays that cause sunburn.
When the sunburn was at its most painful, two days later, the researchers took tiny samples of the sunburned skin. They found high levels of CXCL5, a protein that summons immune cells to injured tissue as part of the body’s inflammatory response.
To determine whether high CXCL5 levels were responsible for the skin’s sensitivity—since no previous studies had specifically linked the protein to pain—the scientists injected rats that hadn’t been exposed to UV rays with CXCL5. Sure enough, these rats showed about the same sensitivity to pain as sunburned rats did.
What’s more, the team found they could reduce the rats’ pain sensitivity by injecting them with an antibody that blocks the effects of CXCL5.

What’s the Context:

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