| Literature DB >> 19350255 |
Robert Rissmann1, Marion H M Oudshoorn, Wim E Hennink, Maria Ponec, Joke A Bouwstra.
Abstract
To disrupt the barrier function of the skin, different in vivo methods have been established, e.g., by acetone wiping or tape-stripping. In this study, the acetone-induced barrier disruption of hairless mice was investigated in order to establish a reliable model to study beneficial, long-term effects on barrier recovery after topical application. For both treatments (i.e., acetone treatment and tape-stripping) the transepidermal water loss directly after disruption and the subsequent barrier recovery profile were similar. Histological assessment showed significant lower number of corneocyte layers in acetone-treated and tape-stripped skin compared to untreated skin, while there was no statistical difference between the two treatments. Lipid analysis of acetone-treated skin revealed that only small fraction of lipids were extracted consisting of predominantly nonpolar lipids. Importantly, the ratio of the barrier lipids, i.e., cholesterol, free fatty acids and ceramides, remained similar between control and acetone-treated skin. This reflects the undisrupted lipid organization, as determined by small-angle X-ray diffraction measurements: the long-periodicity lamellar phase was still present after acetone treatment. Our results contradict earlier studies which reported no mechanical stratum corneum removal, a substantial extraction of lipids and disruption in lipid organization. In conclusion, our studies demonstrate that barrier disruption due to acetone treatment is mainly due to removal of corneocytes.Entities:
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Year: 2009 PMID: 19350255 PMCID: PMC2728065 DOI: 10.1007/s00403-009-0946-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Arch Dermatol Res ISSN: 0340-3696 Impact factor: 3.017
Time protocol of acetone-induced skin barrier disruption
| Time (min) | TEWL (g/h/m2) |
|---|---|
| 0 | 9.4 |
| 3.5 | 9.8 |
| 5.5 | 13.5 |
| 7 | 25.9 |
| 9.5 | 47.3 |
| >11 | >60 |
The skin barrier is disrupted by means of acetone-soaked cotton swabs during various time periods. The barrier disruption is monitored by measuring the transepidermal water loss (TEWL)
Fig. 1Different disruption methods cause abrasion of SC layers. Photomicrographs of frozen cross-sections of hairless mouse skin before (a), directly after disruption with acetone (b) and tape-stripping (c) are shown. The lipophilic fluorescent dye Nile Red stains for nonpolar lipids. The KOH expanded corneocytes can easily be distinguished. Alkali expanded safranin stained cross-sections of mouse epidermis are depicted in panelsd (untreated), e (acetone-treated) and f (tape-stripped). The corneocyte layers on 20 different locations were counted and the mean + SD is presented in panelg
Fig. 2Only little changes in lipid composition and organization after barrier disruption with acetone. A HPTLC of lipid extracts from untreated mouse epidermis (lane 1), acetone-treated epidermis (lane 2) and lipids extracted by the acetone swab (lane 3) are depicted in panela. The amount of lipids applied per lane, represent a skin surface of 10 mm2. Legend on the left indicates the Rf-values of different compounds. SE/WE sterol esters/wax esters, TG triglycerides, CHOL cholesterol, FFA free fatty acids, CER ceramides, acyl-GSL acyl-glycosphingolipids, PE phosphoethanolamine. The scattered intensity (arbitrary units) is plotted as function of scattering vector (q) in panelb. SC sheets of two donors (upper two and lower two patterns) before (untreated) and after acetone treatment were directly mounted into the X-ray beam. The roman numerals indicate the various orders of the LPP: first order (I) located at q = 0.46/nm (d = 13.7 nm), second order (II) at q = 0.94/nm (d = 6.7 nm) and third order (III) at q = 1.42/nm (d = 4.4 nm)