Cell
Volume 157, Issue 7, 19 June 2014, Pages 1527-1534
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Article
Skin β-Endorphin Mediates Addiction to UV Light

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cell.2014.04.032Get rights and content
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Highlights

  • UV exposure leads to elevated blood levels of β-endorphin in mice

  • UV causes systemic analgesia that is reversible with opioid receptor blockade

  • Chronic UV causes dependency and “addiction”-like behavior

  • Addiction-like behaviors require keratinocyte signaling and β-endorphin expression

Summary

UV light is an established carcinogen, yet evidence suggests that UV-seeking behavior has addictive features. Following UV exposure, epidermal keratinocytes synthesize proopiomelanocortin (POMC) that is processed to melanocyte-stimulating hormone, inducing tanning. We show that, in rodents, another POMC-derived peptide, β-endorphin, is coordinately synthesized in skin, elevating plasma levels after low-dose UV. Increases in pain-related thresholds are observed and reversed by pharmacologic opioid antagonism. Opioid blockade also elicits withdrawal signs after chronic UV exposure. This effect was sufficient to guide operant behavioral choices to avoidance of opioid withdrawal (conditioned place aversion). These UV-induced nociceptive and behavioral effects were absent in β-endorphin knockout mice and in mice lacking p53-mediated POMC induction in epidermal keratinocytes. Although primordial UV addiction, mediated by the hedonic action of β-endorphin and anhedonic effects of withdrawal, may theoretically have enhanced evolutionary vitamin D biosynthesis, it now may contribute to the relentless rise in skin cancer incidence in humans.

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Present address: Department of Surgery, Brigham and Women’s Hospital, 75 Francis Street, Boston, MA 02115, USA