Plant Cell Cultures as Source of Cosmetic Active Ingredients

The last decades witnessed a great demand of natural remedies. As a result, medicinal plants have been increasingly cultivated on a commercial scale, but the yield, the productive quality and the safety have not always been satisfactory. Plant cell cultures provide useful alternatives for the produ...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Ani Barbulova, Fabio Apone, Gabriella Colucci
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2014-04-01
Series:Cosmetics
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.mdpi.com/2079-9284/1/2/94
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spelling doaj-1620893cff4343cbbfdbad2065f7e2832020-11-24T23:01:07ZengMDPI AGCosmetics2079-92842014-04-01129410410.3390/cosmetics1020094cosmetics1020094Plant Cell Cultures as Source of Cosmetic Active IngredientsAni Barbulova0Fabio Apone1Gabriella Colucci2Arterra Bioscience srl, via B. Brin 69, 80142 Napoli, ItalyVitalab srl/Arterra Bioscience srl, via B. Brin 69, 80142 Napoli, ItalyVitalab srl/Arterra Bioscience srl, via B. Brin 69, 80142 Napoli, ItalyThe last decades witnessed a great demand of natural remedies. As a result, medicinal plants have been increasingly cultivated on a commercial scale, but the yield, the productive quality and the safety have not always been satisfactory. Plant cell cultures provide useful alternatives for the production of active ingredients for biomedical and cosmetic uses, since they represent standardized, contaminant-free and biosustainable systems, which allow the production of desired compounds on an industrial scale. Moreover, thanks to their totipotency, plant cells grown as liquid suspension cultures can be used as “biofactories” for the production of commercially interesting secondary metabolites, which are in many cases synthesized in low amounts in plant tissues and differentially distributed in the plant organs, such as roots, leaves, flowers or fruits. Although it is very widespread in the pharmaceutical industry, plant cell culture technology is not yet very common in the cosmetic field. The aim of the present review is to focus on the successful research accomplishments in the development of plant cell cultures for the production of active ingredients for cosmetic applications.http://www.mdpi.com/2079-9284/1/2/94plant cell culturesactive ingredientscosmetics
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ani Barbulova
Fabio Apone
Gabriella Colucci
spellingShingle Ani Barbulova
Fabio Apone
Gabriella Colucci
Plant Cell Cultures as Source of Cosmetic Active Ingredients
Cosmetics
plant cell cultures
active ingredients
cosmetics
author_facet Ani Barbulova
Fabio Apone
Gabriella Colucci
author_sort Ani Barbulova
title Plant Cell Cultures as Source of Cosmetic Active Ingredients
title_short Plant Cell Cultures as Source of Cosmetic Active Ingredients
title_full Plant Cell Cultures as Source of Cosmetic Active Ingredients
title_fullStr Plant Cell Cultures as Source of Cosmetic Active Ingredients
title_full_unstemmed Plant Cell Cultures as Source of Cosmetic Active Ingredients
title_sort plant cell cultures as source of cosmetic active ingredients
publisher MDPI AG
series Cosmetics
issn 2079-9284
publishDate 2014-04-01
description The last decades witnessed a great demand of natural remedies. As a result, medicinal plants have been increasingly cultivated on a commercial scale, but the yield, the productive quality and the safety have not always been satisfactory. Plant cell cultures provide useful alternatives for the production of active ingredients for biomedical and cosmetic uses, since they represent standardized, contaminant-free and biosustainable systems, which allow the production of desired compounds on an industrial scale. Moreover, thanks to their totipotency, plant cells grown as liquid suspension cultures can be used as “biofactories” for the production of commercially interesting secondary metabolites, which are in many cases synthesized in low amounts in plant tissues and differentially distributed in the plant organs, such as roots, leaves, flowers or fruits. Although it is very widespread in the pharmaceutical industry, plant cell culture technology is not yet very common in the cosmetic field. The aim of the present review is to focus on the successful research accomplishments in the development of plant cell cultures for the production of active ingredients for cosmetic applications.
topic plant cell cultures
active ingredients
cosmetics
url http://www.mdpi.com/2079-9284/1/2/94
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