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Hidden skin defenders: Blood bacteria compounds show promise against aging effects

Possible anti-aging compounds found in blood bacteria
Credit: Journal of Natural Products (2025). DOI: 10.1021/acs.jnatprod.4c01354

People go to great lengths to maintain youthful-looking skin with masks, creams and serums. Now, researchers have discovered compounds with anti-aging properties hidden beneath our own skin.

The three molecules, produced by a bacterium in the blood, reduced damage and in human skin cell cultures. These findings, in the Journal of Natural Products, could lead to new treatments for aging skin.

Scientists know little about how bacteria by-products (called ) released into the bloodstream impact human health. One class of metabolites of particular interest are compounds because of their anti-aging, anti-inflammatory and antimicrobial properties. In 2015, a blood bacterium that produces indole compounds was discovered, named Paracoccus sanguinis. Chung Sub Kim, Sullim Lee and colleagues were curious about P. sanguinis and investigated its indole-functionalized metabolites.

"We became interested in P. sanguinis because blood-derived microbes are a relatively uncharted area of research," says Kim. "Given the unique environment of the bloodstream, we believed that studying individual species like P. sanguinis could reveal previously unknown metabolic functions relevant to health and disease."

The team grew a big batch of P. sanguinis for three days and then extracted the mixture of metabolites the microbes produced. A combination of analytical methods, including spectrometry, isotope labeling and , enabled the team to tease out the of 12 individual indole metabolites from this mix, including six that had never been identified.

Next, Kim, Lee and colleagues investigated whether these indole metabolites could mitigate harmful processes that are also associated with aging in human skin. They applied liquid solutions containing each indole to wells with cultured human skin cells. Prior to the experiment, the cells were treated to induce elevated levels of reactive oxygen species, compounds responsible for inflammation and collagen damage.

Of the 12 indoles the researchers investigated, three, including two newly identified ones, lowered the amounts of harmful reactive oxygen species in the stressed human skin cells compared to untreated cells. The three metabolites also reduced the levels of two inflammatory proteins and a collagen-damaging protein.

As a result of these initial findings, the researchers say the new indole metabolites are promising candidates for future treatments to counteract skin aging.

More information: Won Min Lee et al, Discovery and Biosynthesis of Indole-Functionalized Metabolites from the Human Blood Bacterium, Paracoccus sanguinis, and Their Anti-Skin Aging Activity, Journal of Natural Products (2025).

Journal information: Journal of Natural Products

Citation: Hidden skin defenders: Blood bacteria compounds show promise against aging effects (2025, June 5) retrieved 8 June 2025 from /news/2025-06-hidden-skin-defenders-blood-bacteria.html
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