• Title of article

    Phenolic Compounds and Skin Permeability: An In Silico Investigation

  • Author/Authors

    Hammami ، Majdi Laboratory of Medicinal and Aromatic Plants - Biotechnology Center of Borj-Cedria , Chaabani ، Emna Laboratory of Medicinal and Aromatic Plants - Biotechnology Center of Borj-Cedria , Yeddes ، Walid Laboratory of Medicinal and Aromatic Plants - Biotechnology Center of Borj-Cedria , Wannes ، Wissem Aidi Laboratory of Medicinal and Aromatic Plants - Biotechnology Center of Borj-Cedria , Bourgou ، Soumaya Laboratory of Medicinal and Aromatic Plants - Biotechnology Center of Borj-Cedria

  • From page
    11
  • To page
    18
  • Abstract
    Background: The skin is the largest organ of the body and provides the main barrier between the internal and external environment. Assessment of skin permeability is of critical importance for understanding and predicting in vivo efficacy and bioavailability of bioactive phenolic compounds. Objectives: This study investigated the relationship between skin permeability and phenolic compounds using in silico methods. Methods: Screening of skin permeability was performed on 475 randomly selected phenolic compounds. Molecules were expressed in SMILE format downloaded from Phenol-Explorer Database (version 3.6, 2016). Then, their skin permeability was determined by the linear model of the quantitative structureactivity relationship (QSAR). The obtained results were investigated for normal distribution and correlation with pharmacological properties. Results: Our investigation showed that ferulate hydroxycinnamic acid derivatives were the most important phenolic subclass with a permeability of -1.65 cm/s. The relationship between permeability and lipophilicity, water solubility, synthetic accessibility, and bioavailability was evaluated. The statistical analysis revealed that the highest skin permeability was associated with three parameters: the topological polar surface area (TPSA), molecular weight, and lipophilicity (iLog P). Conclusion: The cutaneous permeability depended on several chemical parameters of the molecule used. The classification of phenolic compounds according to their structures proved a wide variability in this permeability.
  • Keywords
    Phenolic compounds , In silico , Skin , Cosmetic , Permutation
  • Journal title
    Avicenna Journal of Medical Biochemistry
  • Journal title
    Avicenna Journal of Medical Biochemistry
  • Record number

    2750221