Abstract

The ester-linked ω-hydroxy acyl chain linked to a sphingosine base referred to as CER EOS is essential for the skin barrier lipid organization. While the majority of the skin lipids form a dense, crystalline structure, associated with low permeability, the unsaturated moiety of CER EOS, (either the linoleate or the oleate chain) exists in a liquid phase at the skin's physiological temperature. Thus, the relationship between CER EOS and barrier function is not entirely comprehended. We studied the permeability and lipid organization in skin lipid models, gradually increasing in CER EOS concentration, mixed with non-hydroxy sphingosine-based ceramide (CER NS) in an equimolar ratio of CERs, cholesterol, and free fatty acids (FFAs) mimicking the ratio in the native skin. A significant increase in the orthorhombic-hexagonal phase transition temperature was recorded when CER EOS concentration was raised to 70 mol% of the total CER content and higher, rendering a higher fraction of lipids in the orthorhombic phase at the expense of the hexagonal phase at physiological temperature. The model's permeability did not differ when CER EOS concentration ranged between 10 and 30% but increased significantly at 70% and higher. Using CER EOS with a perdeuterated oleate chain, it was shown that the fraction of lipids in a liquid phase increased with CER EOS concentration, while the neighboring CERs and FFAs remained in a crystalline state. The increased fraction of the liquid phase therefore, had a stronger effect on permeability than the increased fraction of lipids forming an orthorhombic phase.

Highlights

  • The skin protects the body from the invasion of pathogens and other harmful substances in the external environment, as well as preventing desiccation from within

  • The synthetic CERs used in the study: i) N-(tetracosanoyl)-sphingo­ sine (CER NS C24), ii) CER NS C24 with a deuterated fatty acid chain denoted as D-NS, iii) N-(30-Linoleoyloxy-triacontanoyl)-sphingosine (CER EOS (C30)-L), and iv) CER EOS (C30)-O with deuterated oleate chain denoted as D-EOS, were generously donated by Evonik (Essen, BBA - Biomembranes 1863 (2021) 183487

  • Increasing the CER EOS concentration from 10 to 30% of the total CER fraction in the model membrane resulted in no significant difference in permeability (7.8 ± 2.9 to 8.2 ± 4.8 μg/cm2/h)

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Summary

Introduction

The skin protects the body from the invasion of pathogens and other harmful substances in the external environment, as well as preventing desiccation from within. This skin’s barrier function is ascribed to its thin outermost layer known as the stratum corneum (SC) [1,2,3]. Perpendicular to the basal layer of the lamellae, the lipids adopt predominantly the dense orthorhombic lateral packing. This packing plays a role in the low permeability of the skin barrier [14]

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