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Hey Jacob, cAMP, Indian medicine article on helping melanin production (skin tanning)

icey

New member
Thought you might be interested in this article on cAMP, and forskolin, derived from some Indian medicine. Since your target audience is the bodybuilding segment, this seems like it would be a good fit. Maybe you can run it past your guys in India and beat some people to the market? :-)

Summary: Bascially there have been some scientists that have tested a topically applied forskolin cream and found that pale rats were able to produce melanin and darken their skin pigment in response to UV rays, instead of burning as normal.

Originally published September 21 2006
Sunless tanning breakthrough may help people safely get more healing sunlight without burning

by Jessica Fraiser

(NewsTarget) New research published in the journal Nature reveals that a sunless tanning cream derived from an Indian plant may be able to give fair-skinned people tans without overexposing them to the sun, which could result in fewer cases of skin cancer.


Scientists believe that fair-skinned people -- mostly those with red hair -- cannot tan properly because of a defect in receptors on the surface of pigment-producing skin cells. The defect leads to decreased production of the chemical cAMP, which stimulates the skin cells to produce pigment. This means that pale-skinned people tend to burn rather than tan, which can lead to skin cancer. The World Health Organization estimates that roughly 60,000 people worldwide die from skin cancer resulting from overexposure to the sun.

Researchers from the Dana-Farber Institute and Children's Hospital Boston created a cream that has not yet been tested on humans, but could be capable of switching on the tanning mechanism in skin cells without exposure to sunlight. The cream contains a molecule that mimics the process that occurs when skin is exposed to ultraviolet sunlight.

The study authors' genetically engineered, fair-skinned mice did not tan when exposed to low levels of UV radiation, but burned when exposed to high UV levels. The mice were treated with the cream -- a compound called forskolin derived from an Indian plant -- which increased cAMP levels in the skin of the mice. The cream caused the mice to tan, and in subsequent testing, the cream-induced tans were indistinguishable from the tans of mice that tanned naturally.

Lead researcher Dr. David Fisher says forskolin treatments could someday help fair-skinned people get tans without overexposure to the sun, which he says "undoubtedly contribute significantly to high skin cancer incidence."

Fisher says more research is needed to determine if the forskolin cream can penetrate deeply enough in human skin to activate the tanning mechanism.
 
People trying to get a tan and not finding it easy, burning alot, especially people with very light skin such as British/German caucasian people

You know like bodybuilders
 
I'd be in.

I could (in theory) administer Melanotan to test subjects - but this product would be a better idea for those subjects that don't prefer injections (as Melanotan needs).
 
I'd be in.

I could (in theory) administer Melanotan to test subjects - but this product would be a better idea for those subjects that don't prefer injections (as Melanotan needs).

I think that's the main reason most people won't use Melanotan, because of it having to be injected. I know that's why I won't do it. Having an oral supp is the holy grail, but a topical is a good first step.
 
We are actually working on including a blend that helps nourish the skin aswell.
 
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