Molecules (Mar 2020)

Lecithin-Based Dermal Drug Delivery for Anti-Pigmentation Maize Ceramide

  • Kazuhiro Kagotani,
  • Hiroko Nakayama,
  • Liqing Zang,
  • Yuki Fujimoto,
  • Akihito Hayashi,
  • Ryoji Sono,
  • Norihiro Nishimura,
  • Yasuhito Shimada

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/molecules25071595
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 25, no. 7
p. 1595

Abstract

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Ceramides have several well-known biological properties, including anti-pigmentation and anti-melanogenesis, which make them applicable for use in skincare products in cosmetics. However, the efficacy of ceramides is still limited. Dermal or transdermal drug delivery systems can enhance the anti-pigmentation properties of ceramides, although there is currently no systemic evaluation method for the efficacy of these systems. Here we prepared several types of lecithin-based emulsion of maize-derived glucosylceramide, determining PC70-ceramide (phosphatidylcholine-base) to be the safest and most effective anti-pigmentation agent using zebrafish larvae. We also demonstrated the efficacy of PC70 as a drug delivery system by showing that PC70-Nile Red (red fluorescence) promoted Nile Red accumulation in the larval bodies. In addition, PC70-ceramide suppressed melanin in mouse B16 melanoma cells compared to ceramide alone. In conclusion, we developed a lecithin-based dermal delivery method for ceramide using zebrafish larvae with implications for human clinical use.

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