Science
Technological
Platform
Skin
as a Transport Barrier
Mechanism
of Carrier Transport
Skin
Penetration Pathway for a Transfersome®
Publications
Technological platform
Transfersome®
is a complex, most often vesicular, aggregate optimised to attain extremely
flexible and self-regulating membrane, which makes the vesicle very deformable.
Transfersome® vesicle can therefore cross microporous barriers very
efficiently, even when the available passages are much smaller than the
average aggregate size.
When a Transfersome® formulation is applied on the skin and allowed
to dry, the vesicles are attracted by the intracorporal moisture into
the body. The aggregates then penetrate the skin without compromising
the protective properties of the organ.
Transfersome® consists of, mainly natural, amphipatic compounds suspended
in a water-based solution, sometimes containing biocompatible surfactants.
Similar to a liposome, a Transfersome® has a lipid bilayer that surrounds
an aqueous core. In contrast to a liposome, a Transfersome®
bilayer contains at least one component that softens the membrane and
makes it more flexible. This allows an easy and rapid change of Transfersome®
shape (see the shape changes in the animation below).
The basis for an easy shape adaptation is the local bilayer adjustment
to ambient stress via a molecular positive
feedback in each carrier (see changing colours in the Transfersome®
animation). The resulting, unusually high, membrane adaptability is reflected
in the characteristic flux of Transfersome® suspension through a barrier
with the pores of an average size considerably smaller than the typical
vesicle size: with increasing force (head pressure) the suspension transport
rate increases in a sigmoidal fashion until a maximum flow is reached.
The maximum flow value is nearly identical to that of the suspending liquid
and is determined chiefly by fluid viscosity. In contrast, the transport
rate for liposome suspension remains low in very broad force ranges, until
such vesicles become comparable to pore size.
(An exception are the pressures or forces that are high enough to break
such conventional lipid vesicles down to pore size.)
Skin as a Transport Barrier
| Skin is one of the best biological barriers.
Its outermost part, the horny layer (stratum corneum), reaches
less than 10% into the depth of the skin but contributes over 80%
to the skin permeability barrier. This body protecting layer consists
of overlapping, flat corneocytes organized in columnar clusters (see
the illustration on the right). The clusters are sealed with multi-lamellar
lipid sheets that are covalently attached to the cell membranes and
are tightly packed together. Generally, the average number and the
degree of order in the inter cellular lipid lamellae increases toward
the skin surface. |
The stratum corneum, which comprises of
stacks of flat, partially overlapping cells sealed with inter-cellular
lipids, is the main transport obstacle in the skin. It is also the
first line of body defence against the exogenous pathogens. |
The changes in the stratum corneum structure are accompanied by a continuous
but nonlinear change in the local water content near the skin surface:
whereas only 15-25% of water are found on the outside of the organ, much
higher water content (>75%) is measured in the living, deeper skin.
The peak in the skin permeability barrier is located in the inner half
of the horny layer, where the intercellular lipid seals are already formed,
but not yet compromised by the skin cell detachment. The skin thus prevents
both the loss of body fluids and molecules on the one hand, and the in-flow
of pathogens, toxics, as well as drugs on the other.
The few small molecules that have crossed the horny layer are cleared
from the skin through the cutaneous blood microcirculation close to the
organ's surface. Owing to the fact that the total cutaneous blood vessels
surface exceeds, by far, that of the skin, such clearence is very efficient
and fast compared to the kinetics of small molecules diffusion across
the skin barrier. Drug accumulation deep under the skin is therefore difficult,
if not impossible, in particular when the mechanism of drug transport
is diffusion; this is always the case with conventional transdermal delivery
systems.
The Transfersome® mediated administration of low molecular weight
drugs tends to shift the drug distribution towards the deep tissue under
the application site. One of the chief reasons for this is the large size
of the carrier vesicles, which results in the slow clearance of Transfersomes®
from the skin and allows for the desired drug accumulation at the application
site.
Mechanism of Carrier Transport
The skin, simply speaking, is a nanoporous barrier. Pores in the skin
are normally so narrow that they only permit the passage of entities smaller
than a millionth of a millimeter. This precludes any conventional aggregate
carrier from crossing the skin barrier.
The results measured to date suggest that the passage of a Transfersome®
across the skin is a function of vesicle membrane flexibility, hydrophilicity,
and the ability to retain vesicle integrity, while the aggregate undergoes
a dramatic change in shape. A Transfersome® thus acts as a nano-robotic
molecular "injector" capable of penetrating, rather than perforating
the skin barrier. The current view of the Transfersome® mechanism
of action is described as follows:
![[schematic representation of an ultradeformable, mixed lipid vesicle penetrating a narrow pore...]](../../img/science/penetration-seq.gif)
A simulation of an ultradeformable, mixed lipid
vesicle penetrating a narrow pore, owing to the shape-induced demixing
of bilayer components (compare the distribution of red an blue molecules
in the bilayer), vesicle diameter, and pore width adaptation.
When a suspension of Transfersome® vesicles is placed on the surface
of the skin the water evaporates from the skin surface and the vesicles
start to dry out. Due to the strong hydrophilicity of major Transfersome®
ingredients, the vesicles are attracted to the areas of higher water content
in the narrow gaps between adjoining cells in the skin. The phenomenon,
together with the vesicle's extreme ability to deform, enables each Transfersome®
to temporarily open the pores through which water normally evaporates
between the cells. This creates 20-30 nm wide pathways between the skin
cells, two orders of magnitude wider than the original nanopores. Such
newly activated inter-cellular passages can accommodate sufficiently deformable
vesicles maintaining their integrity but changing their shape to fit the
channel; the calculated sequence in the above illustration highlights
the process. Insufficiently deformable entities fail to pass through the
channels. Along these said pathways in the horny layer, a Transfersome®
reaches regions of high water content in the deeper skin layers. Subsequently,
the vesicles that have crossed the skin barrier are distributed between
the cells. Being too large to enter the blood vessels locally, a Transfersome®
bypasses the cutaneous capillary bed and reaches the subcutaneous tissue.
Ultimately, the vesicle may arrive into the systemic blood circulation
via the fenestrated lymphatic system, which has openings (fenestrations)
of sufficient width; most often, however, the vesicles applied locally
are ultimately bio-processed and their building blocks are re-utilised
in peripheral tissues below the application site.
The large number of hydrophilic, i.e. water-loving, molecules or groups
united in a single Transfersome® entity enhances the aggregate sensitivity
to the driving force that stems from the water concentration gradient
across the skin. This phenomenon enhances the propensity of the ultradeformable
Transfersomes® to move across the skin barrier. It explains the unusually
high efficiency of suitable mixed lipid vesicle transport across the skin
compared to liposomes (rigid vesicles) or mixed micelles (small, rigid
aggregates of Transfersome® components). Liposomes cannot deform sufficiently
to open or fit the channels. while mixed micelles lack the strength necessary
to open and cross such channels. The widely divergent skin penetration
profiles measured for the different aggregate suspensions corroborate
this conclusion.
Skin Penetration Pathway for a Transfersome®
| ![[image]](../../img/science/honey.jpg)
The confocal laser scanning microgaph of fluorescent ultradeformable
vesicles: hydrophilic intercellular channels between cells in the
stratum corneum are opened by the skin penetrating Transfersomes®.
|
Various methods can be used to break through the skin
barrier forcefully. The skin (cutis) poration by electrical
or mechanical means creates a few wide, hydrophilic passages through
the organ which typically compromise the skin barrier for a day, at
least. The less aggressive iontophoresis produces narrower electrical
breaks through the skin (with pores of less than 20 nm size), which
add up to approximately 0.005% of the total skin surface. In contrast
to this, Transfersome® vesicles generate wider, more numerous
and more uniformly distributed , but also only transiently open pathways
across the organ; a birds-eye view of the skin after epicutaneous
Transfersomes® application illustrates the phenomenon (see the
picture on the left). The resulting passages make approximately 80%
of the skin surface accessible for carrier mediated transport. They
are too small, however, to allow simultaneous passage of pathogens,
such as viruses or bacteria. |
Due to the large number of Transfersome®-specific pathways in the
skin, the transport through shunts, such as hair follicles or gland openings,
is also not significant.
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