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Dermal Delivery of Selected Polyphenols from Silybum marianum. Theoretical and Experimental Study

Authors :
Kosina, Pavel
Paloncyova, Marketa
Svobodova, Alena Rajnochova
Zalesak, Bohumil
Biedermann, David
Ulrichova, Jitka
Vostalova, Jitka
Kosina, Pavel
Paloncyova, Marketa
Svobodova, Alena Rajnochova
Zalesak, Bohumil
Biedermann, David
Ulrichova, Jitka
Vostalova, Jitka
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Silymarin is a well-known standardized extract from the seeds of milk thistle (Silybum marianum L., Asteraceae) with a pleiotropic effect on human health, including skin anticancer potential. Detailed characterization of flavonolignans properties affecting interactions with human skin was of interest. The partition coefficients log P-ow of main constitutive flavonolignans, taxifolin and their respective dehydro derivatives were determined by a High Performance Liquid Chromatography (HPLC) method and by mathematical (in silico) approaches in n-octanol/water and model lipid membranes. These parameters were compared with human skin intake ex vivo. The experimental log P-ow values for individual diastereomers were estimated for the first time. The replacement of n-octanol with model lipid membranes in the theoretical lipophilicity estimation improved the prediction strength. During transdermal transport, all the studied compounds permeated the human skin ex vivo; none of them reached the acceptor liquid. Both experimental/theoretical tools allowed the studied polyphenols to be divided into two groups: low (taxifolin, silychristin, silydianin) vs. high (silybin, dehydrosilybin, isosilybin) lipophilicity and skin intake. In silico predictions can be usefully applied for estimating general lipophilicity trends, such as skin penetration or accumulation predictions. However, the theoretical models cannot yet provide the dermal delivery differences of compounds with very similar physico-chemical properties; e.g., between diastereomers.<br />QC 20190218

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1234938501
Document Type :
Electronic Resource
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3390.molecules24010061