Targeting Circadian Rhythm for the Regulation of Skin Collagen Metabolism
Cheng Wang, Tianlin Song, Yurong Zhang, Nihong Li, Ling Xie, Min Xie, Xingwu Jiang, Guanglei Lü, Yun Meng, Chaochao Wang, Lijun Yue, Wei Yang, Yang Li, Yelin Wu, Liang Chen

TL;DR
This study shows that collagen metabolism in skin follows a daily rhythm and that timed application of two compounds improves skin quality.
Contribution
The study introduces a time-coordinated application of baicalin and PT-1 to synergistically enhance collagen metabolism.
Findings
Collagen assembly genes peak during the day, while synthesis and degradation genes peak at night in fibroblasts.
Time-coordinated application of baicalin and PT-1 increased collagen fiber density in mice and improved skin quality in humans.
Clinical trial results showed significant improvements in skin luminance, firmness, and nasolabial fold depth.
Abstract
Collagen is essential for maintaining skin structure and function, and the circadian rhythm is known to regulate a wide range of physiological processes. To investigate whether collagen metabolism in human skin fibroblasts exhibits circadian regulation, and to evaluate whether the time‐coordinated application of baicalin at daytime and palmitoyl tripeptide‐1 (PT‐1) at nighttime synergistically promotes collagen fiber formation and improves overall skin quality. A circadian‐synchronized human skin fibroblast model was established. The expression of collagen metabolism‐related genes was analyzed using qPCR and immunofluorescence. Subsequently, an 8‐week topical application study was conducted in mice using a regimen of daytime baicalin and nighttime PT‐1. Finally, a clinical trial involving 30 female participants was conducted, employing the same time‐coordinated application scheme.…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSkin Protection and Aging · Advancements in Transdermal Drug Delivery · Circadian rhythm and melatonin
