%0 Journal Article %A Caroline de Almeida Freitas Accioli %A Michelle Sabrina da Silva %A Bianca Aloise Maneira CorrĂȘa Santos %A Carlos Rangel Rodrigues %T Aryl hydrocarbon receptor as a therapeutical target of environmentally induced skin conditions %D 2023 %R 10.1124/molpharm.122.000627 %J Molecular Pharmacology %P MOLPHARM-MR-2022-000627 %X The aryl hydrocarbon receptor (AhR) is a ligand-activated transcription factor, expressed in several tissues and involved in the response to environmental stressors. Studies have already associated exposure to environmental factors, such as organic air pollutants, products of the skin microbiota, and solar radiation, with the development/worsening of skin conditions, mediated by AhR. On the other hand, recent studies have shown that synthetic and natural compounds are able to modulate the activation of some AhR signaling pathways, minimizing the harmful response of these environmental stressors in the skin. Thus, AhR constitutes a new therapeutic target for the prevention or treatment of skin conditions induced by the skin exposome. Here in, an overview of potential AhR ligands and their biological effects in environmentally induced skin conditions are presented. The literature survey pointed out divergences in the mechanism of action from a therapeutic perspective. Although most studies point to the benefits of ligand downregulation of AhR signaling, counteracting the toxic effects of environmental factors on the skin, some studies suggest the AhR ligand activation as a therapeutical mechanism for some skin conditions. Furthermore, both agonist and antagonist profiles were identified in the AhR modulation by the synthetic and natural compounds raised. Despite that, this target is still little explored, and further studies are needed to elucidate the molecular mechanisms involved and identify new AhR ligands with therapeutic potential. Significance Statement The aryl hydrocarbon receptor (AhR) is involved in different skin physiological and pathological processes, including toxic mechanisms of environmental factors. Synthetic and natural AhR ligands have demonstrated therapeutic potential for skin conditions induced by these agents. Thus, a comprehensive understanding of the skin toxicity mechanisms involving the AhR, as well as the use of AhR modulators from a therapeutic perspective provides an alternative approach to the development of new treatments for skin disorders induced by the exposome. %U https://molpharm.aspetjournals.org/content/molpharm/early/2023/03/14/molpharm.122.000627.full.pdf