Therapeutic Potential of Recombinant Collagen XVII in Blue Light-Induced Skin Photoaging
by Xudong Wang·Updated 1mo ago
17.1 KB1files
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Description
Xudong Wang's research document, uploaded to figshare on 2026-04-28, details an experimental study on the protective effects of recombinant human collagen XVII against blue light-induced skin damage. The 17.1 KB DOCX file contains results from in vitro and in vivo models using human keratinocytes, dermal fibroblasts, and rat skin. The study assesses outcomes including cell viability, inflammation, and skin structure using methods like PCR, Western blot, and histopathology.
Use Cases
Analyze the relationship between blue light exposure and molecular markers of skin aging based on the described experimental results.
Train models to predict therapeutic efficacy of collagen-based compounds based on in vitro cell viability and migration data mentioned in the description.
Study the modulation of Notch signaling pathways in cellular senescence based on the mechanistic findings described.
Correlate histological measurements (e.g., epidermal thickness, collagen preservation) with functional skin parameters (e.g., transepidermal water loss) from the in vivo model.
Strengths
The dataset is openly licensed under CC-BY-4.0, permitting reuse and redistribution.
The description provides a detailed methodological account of in vitro and in vivo experiments.
The document includes results from multiple assessment techniques (e.g., PCR, Western blot, histopathology).
Limitations
The dataset is a single 17.1 KB DOCX file, indicating a very limited scope of raw data.
Column-level documentation is absent; field semantics must be inferred after download.
Row count is unknown, which may limit suitability assessment for quantitative analysis.
Provenance
Source
figshare
Collection Method
Experimental research data collected from laboratory models.
Time Range
null
Freshness
Last updated 2026-04-28 05:28:14; freshness should be verified.
Geography
null
The primary data is contained within a DOCX document, which may require parsing to extract structured information.