Abstract

Effective protection from the harmful effects of UV radiation may be achieved by using sunscreens containing organic or inorganic UV filters. The number of currently available UV filters is limited and some of the allowed molecules possess limitations such as systemic absorption, endocrine disruption properties, contact and photocontact allergy induction, and low photostability. In the search for new organic UV filters we designed and synthesized a series consisting of 5-benzylidene and 5-(3-phenylprop-2-en-1-ylidene)imidazolidine-2,4-dione (hydantoin) derivatives. The photoprotective activity of the tested compounds was confirmed in methanol solutions and macrogol formulations. The most promising compounds possessed similar UV protection parameter values as selected commercially available UV filters. The compound diethyl 2,2′-((Z)-4-((E)-3-(4-methoxyphenyl)allylidene)-2,5-dioxoimidazolidine-1,3-diyl)diacetate (4g) was characterized as an especially efficient UVA photoprotective agent with a UVA PF of 6.83 ± 0.05 and favorable photostability. Diethyl 2,2′-((Z)-4-(4-methoxybenzylidene)-2,5-dioxo- imidazolidine-1,3-diyl)diacetate (3b) was the most promising UVB-filter, with a SPFin vitro of 3.07 ± 0.04 and very good solubility and photostability. The main photodegradation products were geometric isomers of the parent compounds. These compounds were also shown to be non-cytotoxic at concentrations up to 50 µM when tested on three types of human skin cells and possess no estrogenic activity, according to the results of a MCF-7 breast cancer model.

Highlights

  • Sunscreens are necessary to protect the skin against the acute and chronic consequences of ultraviolet radiation (UVR)

  • These compounds were obtained from appropriately substituted benzaldehyde

  • The results indicates an improvement of the functional photostability by 31.1% for 2a and by 30.2% for

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Summary

Introduction

Sunscreens are necessary to protect the skin against the acute and chronic consequences of ultraviolet radiation (UVR). The main active ingredients of sunscreens called UV-filters are inorganic blockers which reflect or scatter UVR or organic absorbers. Organic UV-filters act as chemical energy converters—after absorption of photons the molecule is excited to a higher energy state, the absorbed energy is dissipated by the emission of photons or heat and molecule returns to the ground state [1,2]. Modern organic UV-filter molecules are expected to be UV-absorbers with high extinction coefficients, but they must be photostable, safe and readily soluble in cosmetics solvents. Typical exposure to UV-filters is very high because of their concentration in sunscreens which reaches 10% for some organic

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