'Second skin': New material temporarily
tightens skin
Polymer could also be
used to protect dry skin, deliver drugs
"Second
skin" polymer could also be used to protect dry skin and deliver drugs.
Scientists at MIT, Massachusetts General Hospital, Living Proof,
and Olivo Labs have developed a new material that can temporarily protect and
tighten skin, and smooth wrinkles. With further development, it could also be
used to deliver drugs to help treat skin conditions such as eczema and other
types of dermatitis.
The material, a silicone-based polymer that could be applied on
the skin as a thin, imperceptible coating, mimics the mechanical and elastic
properties of healthy, youthful skin. In tests with human subjects, the
researchers found that the material was able to reshape "eye bags"
under the lower eyelids and also enhance skin hydration. This type of
"second skin" could also be adapted to provide long-lasting
ultraviolet protection, the researchers say.
"It's an invisible layer that can provide a barrier,
provide cosmetic improvement, and potentially deliver a drug locally to the
area that's being treated. Those three things together could really make it
ideal for use in humans," says Daniel Anderson, an associate professor in
MIT's Department of Chemical Engineering and a member of MIT's Koch Institute
for Integrative Cancer Research and Institute for Medical Engineering and
Science (IMES).
Anderson is one of the authors of a paper describing the polymer
in the May 9, 2016 online issue of Nature Materials. Robert Langer, the David H. Koch Institute
Professor at MIT and a member of the Koch Institute, is the paper's senior
author, and the paper's lead author is Betty Yu SM '98, ScD '02, former vice president
at Living Proof. Langer and Anderson are co-founders of Living Proof and Olivo
Labs, and Yu earned her master's and doctorate at MIT.
Mimicking skin
As skin ages, it becomes less firm and less elastic -- problems
that can be exacerbated by sun exposure. This impairs skin's ability to protect
against extreme temperatures, toxins, microorganisms, radiation, and injury.
About 10 years ago, the research team set out to develop a protective coating
that could restore the properties of healthy skin, for both medical and
cosmetic applications.
"We started thinking about how we might be able to control
the properties of skin by coating it with polymers that would impart beneficial
effects," Anderson says. "We also wanted it to be invisible and
comfortable."
The researchers created a library of more than 100 possible
polymers, all of which contained a chemical structure known as siloxane -- a
chain of alternating atoms of silicon and oxygen. These polymers can be
assembled into a network arrangement known as a cross-linked polymer layer
(XPL). The researchers then tested the materials in search of one that would
best mimic the appearance, strength, and elasticity of healthy skin.
"It has to have the right optical properties, otherwise it
won't look good, and it has to have the right mechanical properties, otherwise
it won't have the right strength and it won't perform correctly," Langer
says.
The best-performing material has elastic properties very similar
to those of skin. In laboratory tests, it easily returned to its original state
after being stretched more than 250 percent (natural skin can be elongated
about 180 percent). In laboratory tests, the novel XPL's elasticity was much
better than that of two other types of wound dressings now used on skin --
silicone gel sheets and polyurethane films.
"Creating a material that behaves like skin is very
difficult," says Barbara Gilchrest, a dermatologist at MGH and an author
of the paper. "Many people have tried to do this, and the materials that
have been available up until this have not had the properties of being
flexible, comfortable, nonirritating, and able to conform to the movement of
the skin and return to its original shape."
The XPL is currently delivered in a two-step process. First,
polysiloxane components are applied to the skin, followed by a platinum
catalyst that induces the polymer to form a strong cross-linked film that
remains on the skin for up to 24 hours. This catalyst has to be added after the
polymer is applied because after this step the material becomes too stiff to
spread. Both layers are applied as creams or ointments, and once spread onto
the skin, XPL becomes essentially invisible.
High performance
The researchers performed several studies in humans to test the
material's safety and effectiveness. In one study, the XPL was applied to the
under-eye area where "eye bags" often form as skin ages. These eye
bags are caused by protrusion of the fat pad underlying the skin of the lower
lid. When the material was applied, it applied a steady compressive force that
tightened the skin, an effect that lasted for about 24 hours.
In another study, the XPL was applied to forearm skin to test
its elasticity. When the XPL-treated skin was distended with a suction cup, it
returned to its original position faster than untreated skin.
The researchers also tested the material's ability to prevent
water loss from dry skin. Two hours after application, skin treated with the
novel XPL suffered much less water loss than skin treated with a high-end
commercial moisturizer. Skin coated with petrolatum was as effective as XPL in
tests done two hours after treatment, but after 24 hours, skin treated with XPL
had retained much more water. None of the study participants reported any
irritation from wearing XPL.
Living Proof has spun out the XPL technology to Olivo
Laboratories, LLC, a new startup formed to focus on the further development of
the XPL technology. Initially, Olivo's team will focus on medical applications
of the technology for treating skin conditions such as dermatitis.
Story Source:
The above post is reprinted from materials provided by Massachusetts Institute
of Technology. The original item
was written by Anne Trafton.Note: Materials may be edited for content and length.
Journal Reference:
1. Betty Yu, Soo-Young Kang, Ariya Akthakul,
Nithin Ramadurai, Morgan Pilkenton, Alpesh Patel, Amir Nashat, Daniel G.
Anderson, Fernanda H. Sakamoto, Barbara A. Gilchrest, R. Rox Anderson,
Robert Langer. An elastic second skin. Nature Materials, 2016; DOI: 10.1038/nmat4635
Cite This Page:
Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
"'Second skin': New material temporarily tightens skin: Polymer could also
be used to protect dry skin, deliver drugs." ScienceDaily. ScienceDaily, 9
May 2016. <www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2016/05/160509115127.htm>.
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