Abstract

Designing chemical molecules that target the skin for non-invasive transdermal drug delivery is of significant interest for both wound healing and skincare applications. These skin-targeting molecules must permeate the outermost protective layer of the skin, the stratum corneum (SC), which consists of dead corneocytes embedded in a lipid matrix, to fulfill their biological functions. Adsorption onto and diffusion through the lipid matrix in the SC represent two key steps for the successful permeation of a skin-targeting molecule across the SC into the underlying skin layers. Here we compare the effects of cyclization and palmitoylation on the adsorption and diffusion of a short polar peptide across a model SC lipid bilayer using molecular dynamics simulations. The cyclized peptide showed slightly better binding to the SC lipid bilayer and similar interaction energies with SC lipids compared to the unmodified peptide. In contrast, the palmitoylated peptide exhibited much stronger interaction with SC lipids via insertion of its attached fatty acid tail into the SC lipid bilayer. The average diffusivity of the cyclized peptide across the SC lipid bilayer was approximately twice that of the unmodified peptide, whereas the palmitoylated peptide’s diffusivity was about 2.7 times higher. Thus, palmitoylation appears to be a promising strategy for enhancing the binding and permeability of short polar peptides across the SC lipid matrix.

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