June 21, 2022

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Research finds evidence to suggest Pacific whiting skin has anti-aging properties that prevent wrinkles

The observer sampling station on a catcher processor in the at-sea Pacific hake fishery off the U.S. West Coast. Credit: NOAA.
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The observer sampling station on a catcher processor in the at-sea Pacific hake fishery off the U.S. West Coast. Credit: NOAA.

The gelatin in the skin of Pacific whiting, an abundant fish on the Pacific Coast of North America, may help prevent skin wrinkling caused by ultraviolet radiation, a new Oregon State University study found.

Pacific whiting is caught in large volumes in the United States but consumers have little familiarity with the mild, white meat fish also known as hake. It is popular in Europe, though, where it is the eighth most consumed species. In the U.S., the 10 most-consumed species account for 77% of total per capita seafood consumption and Pacific whiting is not among the top 10.

By studying Pacific whiting. Jung Kwon, an assistant professor at Oregon State's Seafood Research & Education Center in Astoria, Oregon, is looking to change that and alleviate pressure on stocks of those 10 species, which include salmon and tuna.

She studies and their potential to improve and is particularly interested in the benefits from parts of marine organisms such as fish skin, which many U.S. consumers choose to discard rather than eat.

"Fish skins are an abundant resource that we already know have valuable nutritional properties," Kwon said. "But we wanted to find out what additional potential value might be found in something traditionally considered a byproduct."

In a paper recently published in the journal Marine Drugs, Kwon and a team of researchers looked at that contribute on a to the wrinkling of skin. That wrinkling is promoted by chronic exposure to , which breaks down collagen in the skin.

The researchers extracted gelatin from Pacific whiting fish and then looked at what impact it had on anti-oxidant and and pathways known to degrade collagen and promote synthesis of collagen.

They found that the Pacific whiting skin:

Kwon cautioned that these are initial results obtained in her lab through a human cell model system. Further research is needed using animal models.

"We saw some potential with a positive response in the cell model system," she said. "This gives us good evidence to take those next steps."

More information: Seok Hee Han et al, Anti-Photoaging Effect of Hydrolysates from Pacific Whiting Skin via MAPK/AP-1, NF-κB, TGF-β/Smad, and Nrf-2/HO-1 Signaling Pathway in UVB-Induced Human Dermal Fibroblasts, Marine Drugs (2022). DOI: 10.3390/md20050308

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