An Evaluation of Collagen Peptide for Transdermal Delivery Using Strat-M® Membrane and Excised Mouse Skin

Authors

  • Zheng Yan* College of Bioengineering, Beijing Ρolytechnic, Beijing 100176, China
  • Guo-Wei Yang College of Bioengineering, Beijing Ρolytechnic, Beijing 100176, China
  • Xiao-Qing Zhang Beijing Semnl Biotechnology Co., Ltd., Beijing 100062, China
  • Li-Ge Liu Beijing Semnl Biotechnology Co., Ltd., Beijing 100062, China
  • Hai-Yan Wang Beijing Semnl Biotechnology Co., Ltd., Beijing 100062, China

Keywords:

collagen peptide, Strat-M®, in vitro, transdermal absorption, molecular weight distribution

Abstract

In the fields of medicine and cosmetics, transdermal experiments commonly used to study the transdermal absorption of topical formulations. In this study, we applied Strat-M® membrane to study the in vitro transdermal properties of collagen peptides with different average molecular weights, and compared them with the transdermal absorption through excised mouse skin in vitro. The results here showed that the transdermal rate of collagen peptide through Strat-M® and excised mouse skin increased linearly with time, and the different concentrations of collagen peptide solutions affected the final cumulative transmission. The cumulative transmission per unit area and transdermal rate of CP500 were both the highest among the four CPs. The cumulative transmission per unit area of collagen peptides through Strat-M® has a high correlation with that through excised mouse skin, R2 > 0.98. Strat-M® can replace the excised mouse skin in vitro to carry out the transdermal experiments of collagen peptides. Our results can be used to guide formulators in the selection of vehicles for early development in the pharmaceutical, personal care and cosmetic industries.

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Published

2025-01-31

Issue

Section

Original Articles

How to Cite

Zheng Yan*, Guo-Wei Yang, Xiao-Qing Zhang, Li-Ge Liu, and Hai-Yan Wang , trans. 2025. “An Evaluation of Collagen Peptide for Transdermal Delivery Using Strat-M® Membrane and Excised Mouse Skin”. Human Biology 95 (1): 1030-35. https://www.humbiol.org/Home/article/view/280.

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