Cholesterol sulfate and calcium affect stratum corneum lipid organization over a wide temperature range

Abstract The main diffusion barrier for drugs penetrating through the skin is located in the intercellular lipid matrix in the upper layer of the skin, the stratum corneum (SC). The main lipid classes in the SC are ceramides (CER), free fatty acids (FFA) and cholesterol (CHOL). The lipids in SC are...

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Main Authors: J.A. Bouwstra, G.S. Gooris, F.E.R. Dubbelaar, M. Ponec
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 1999-12-01
Series:Journal of Lipid Research
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0022227520321052
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spelling doaj-f28100bbe5c74e4cbcf1c6bee0a66c432021-04-27T11:49:23ZengElsevierJournal of Lipid Research0022-22751999-12-01401223032312Cholesterol sulfate and calcium affect stratum corneum lipid organization over a wide temperature rangeJ.A. Bouwstra0G.S. Gooris1F.E.R. Dubbelaar2M. Ponec3To whom correspondence should be addressed.; Leiden/Amsterdam Center for Drug Research, Gorlaeus Laboratories, Leiden University, P.O. Box 9502, 2300 RA Leiden, The NetherlandsLeiden/Amsterdam Center for Drug Research, Gorlaeus Laboratories, Leiden University, P.O. Box 9502, 2300 RA Leiden, The NetherlandsLeiden/Amsterdam Center for Drug Research, Gorlaeus Laboratories, Leiden University, P.O. Box 9502, 2300 RA Leiden, The NetherlandsDepartment of Dermatology, Leiden University Medical Center, Leiden, The NetherlandsAbstract The main diffusion barrier for drugs penetrating through the skin is located in the intercellular lipid matrix in the upper layer of the skin, the stratum corneum (SC). The main lipid classes in the SC are ceramides (CER), free fatty acids (FFA) and cholesterol (CHOL). The lipids in SC are organized into two lamellar phases with periodicities of approximately 13 and 6 nm, respectively. Similar lipid organization has been found with equimolar CHOL:CER:FFA mixtures in SAXD studies performed at room temperature. However, one may conclude that the phase behavior of the mixtures is similar to that in SC only when the lipid organization of the lipid mixtures resembles that in SC over a wide temperature range. Therefore, in the present study, the organization of the lipid mixtures has been studied in a temperature range between 20° and 95°C. From these experiments it appeared that at elevated temperatures in equimolar CHOL:CER:FFA mixtures a new prominent 4.3 nm phase is formed between 35–55°C, which is absent or only weakly formed in intact human and pig SC, respectively. As it has been suggested that gradients of pH and cholesterol sulfate exist in the SC and that Ca2+ is present only in the lowest SC layers, the effect of pH, cholesterol sulfate, and Ca2+ on the lipid phase behavior has been investigated with lipid mixtures. Both an increase in pH from 5 (pH at the skin surface) to 7.4 (pH at the SC–stratum granulosum interface) and the presence of cholesterol sulfate promote the formation of the 13 nm lamellar phase. Furthermore, cholesterol sulfate reduces the amount of CHOL that is present in crystalline domains, causes a shift in the formation of the 4.3 nm phase to higher temperatures, and makes this phase less prominent at higher temperatures. The finding that Ca2+ counteracts the effects of cholesterol sulfate indicates the importance of a proper balance of minor SC components for appropriate SC lipid organization. In addition, when the findings are extrapolated to the in vivo situation, it seems that cholesterol sulfate is required to dissolve cholesterol in the lamellar phases and to stabilize SC lipid organization. Therefore, a drop in cholesterol sulfate content in the superficial layers of the SC is expected to destabilize the lipid lamellar phases, which might facilitate the desquamation process.—Bouwstra, J. A., G. S. Gooris, F. E. R. Dubbelaar, and M. Ponec. Cholesterol sulfate and calcium affect stratum corneum lipid organization over a wide temperature range.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0022227520321052stratum corneumceramidesphase behaviorX-ray diffraction
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author J.A. Bouwstra
G.S. Gooris
F.E.R. Dubbelaar
M. Ponec
spellingShingle J.A. Bouwstra
G.S. Gooris
F.E.R. Dubbelaar
M. Ponec
Cholesterol sulfate and calcium affect stratum corneum lipid organization over a wide temperature range
Journal of Lipid Research
stratum corneum
ceramides
phase behavior
X-ray diffraction
author_facet J.A. Bouwstra
G.S. Gooris
F.E.R. Dubbelaar
M. Ponec
author_sort J.A. Bouwstra
title Cholesterol sulfate and calcium affect stratum corneum lipid organization over a wide temperature range
title_short Cholesterol sulfate and calcium affect stratum corneum lipid organization over a wide temperature range
title_full Cholesterol sulfate and calcium affect stratum corneum lipid organization over a wide temperature range
title_fullStr Cholesterol sulfate and calcium affect stratum corneum lipid organization over a wide temperature range
title_full_unstemmed Cholesterol sulfate and calcium affect stratum corneum lipid organization over a wide temperature range
title_sort cholesterol sulfate and calcium affect stratum corneum lipid organization over a wide temperature range
publisher Elsevier
series Journal of Lipid Research
issn 0022-2275
publishDate 1999-12-01
description Abstract The main diffusion barrier for drugs penetrating through the skin is located in the intercellular lipid matrix in the upper layer of the skin, the stratum corneum (SC). The main lipid classes in the SC are ceramides (CER), free fatty acids (FFA) and cholesterol (CHOL). The lipids in SC are organized into two lamellar phases with periodicities of approximately 13 and 6 nm, respectively. Similar lipid organization has been found with equimolar CHOL:CER:FFA mixtures in SAXD studies performed at room temperature. However, one may conclude that the phase behavior of the mixtures is similar to that in SC only when the lipid organization of the lipid mixtures resembles that in SC over a wide temperature range. Therefore, in the present study, the organization of the lipid mixtures has been studied in a temperature range between 20° and 95°C. From these experiments it appeared that at elevated temperatures in equimolar CHOL:CER:FFA mixtures a new prominent 4.3 nm phase is formed between 35–55°C, which is absent or only weakly formed in intact human and pig SC, respectively. As it has been suggested that gradients of pH and cholesterol sulfate exist in the SC and that Ca2+ is present only in the lowest SC layers, the effect of pH, cholesterol sulfate, and Ca2+ on the lipid phase behavior has been investigated with lipid mixtures. Both an increase in pH from 5 (pH at the skin surface) to 7.4 (pH at the SC–stratum granulosum interface) and the presence of cholesterol sulfate promote the formation of the 13 nm lamellar phase. Furthermore, cholesterol sulfate reduces the amount of CHOL that is present in crystalline domains, causes a shift in the formation of the 4.3 nm phase to higher temperatures, and makes this phase less prominent at higher temperatures. The finding that Ca2+ counteracts the effects of cholesterol sulfate indicates the importance of a proper balance of minor SC components for appropriate SC lipid organization. In addition, when the findings are extrapolated to the in vivo situation, it seems that cholesterol sulfate is required to dissolve cholesterol in the lamellar phases and to stabilize SC lipid organization. Therefore, a drop in cholesterol sulfate content in the superficial layers of the SC is expected to destabilize the lipid lamellar phases, which might facilitate the desquamation process.—Bouwstra, J. A., G. S. Gooris, F. E. R. Dubbelaar, and M. Ponec. Cholesterol sulfate and calcium affect stratum corneum lipid organization over a wide temperature range.
topic stratum corneum
ceramides
phase behavior
X-ray diffraction
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0022227520321052
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