Matrixyl 10mg vial
Recolha atualmente indisponível
NOT FOR HUMAN CONSUMPTION
Matrixyl® is a trade name most commonly associated with the cosmetic peptide palmitoyl pentapeptide-4 (often written Pal-KTTKS), a palmitoylated “matrikine” designed for topical anti-aging formulations.
Matrixyl 3000® is a peptide blend best known for combining palmitoyl tripeptide-1 (historically “palmitoyl oligopeptide”) with palmitoyl tetrapeptide-7 (often described as an anti-inflammatory / anti-IL-6 signaling peptide in skincare literature).
Regulatory status (practical): Matrixyl peptides are cosmetic ingredients (not FDA/EMA “drug” actives) and are typically used in leave-on products aimed at improving the appearance of aging skin.
2) Chemical and biological design rationale
2.1 Why “palmitoyl-”?
Palmitoylation (attachment of a C16 fatty chain) is a common cosmetic-peptide strategy intended to:
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increase lipophilicity,
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improve partitioning into the stratum corneum, and
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increase residence time vs a non-lipidated peptide (which would be rapidly degraded and poorly permeable).
2.2 Why KTTKS?
The KTTKS sequence is described as a collagen type I fragment (“matrikine” concept)—a signal-like peptide meant to “tell” fibroblasts that extracellular matrix (ECM) repair is needed.
3) Molecular mechanism of action
3.1 Palmitoyl pentapeptide-4 (Matrixyl): fibroblast ECM signaling
Mechanistic reviews consistently describe Pal-KTTKS as upregulating dermal ECM components in fibroblast systems, including:
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procollagen / collagen synthesis,
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elastin and fibronectin, and
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hyaluronic-acid–related pathways (e.g., HAS1 in vitro).
3.2 Matrixyl 3000: ECM support + inflammatory tone
Matrixyl 3000’s components are often framed as:
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palmitoyl tripeptide-1 → ECM “repair signaling,” and
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palmitoyl tetrapeptide-7 → reduction of inflammatory signaling (commonly via IL-6 modulation in cosmetic science narratives).
Scientific caveat: Most mechanistic claims are based on in vitro or supplier-compiled datasets; the most defensible clinical claim is improvement in appearance metrics (wrinkle depth/roughness/elasticity), not “rebuilding” skin in a medical sense.
4) Pharmacokinetics and delivery constraints (topical reality)
Matrixyl peptides are used topically, and their “PK” is really about:
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skin penetration/partitioning (helped by palmitoylation),
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local stability in a cosmetic vehicle, and
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achieving sufficient local concentration near viable epidermis/upper dermis to influence fibroblast signaling indirectly or via diffusion.
5) Evidence base (clinical and preclinical)
5.1 Human studies (what exists publicly)
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A 2023 randomized, split-face style clinical study investigated peptide-based topical approaches including palmitoyl pentapeptide-4 for crow’s feet outcomes (wrinkle-related endpoints).
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A 2020 clinical paper discussing palmitoyl pentapeptide-4 notes prior work (commonly attributed to Robinson et al.) reporting small but significant wrinkle/fine-line improvements over ~12 weeks at commonly used concentrations.
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Many “Matrixyl 3000” performance statements are frequently repeated in cosmetic education sources; treat these as supporting context unless tied to a peer-reviewed methods/results paper.
5.2 Preclinical / mechanistic evidence (stronger but indirect)
A 2025 review summarizes palmitoyl pentapeptide-4 as increasing procollagen and affecting hyaluronic-acid synthesisin fibroblast systems, consistent with the ECM-support mechanism.
Broader peptide reviews also describe KTTKS-related fragments as supporting collagen, elastin, fibronectin, and glycosaminoglycan biology.
Evidence-quality note: Topical cosmetic peptides often show modest-to-moderate improvements in appearance metrics, with outcomes depending heavily on formulation, concentration, study design, and baseline photodamage.
6) Practical “benefits” (appearance-focused, evidence-weighted)
| Benefit domain | What’s realistic to claim | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Fine lines / wrinkle appearance | Improvement is plausible | Supported by clinical and mechanistic literature, typically modest effect sizes. |
| Skin texture / smoothness | Plausible improvement | Often tracks with hydration + ECM support and reduced roughness measures. |
| Elasticity / firmness (appearance) | Possible | Usually secondary endpoints; depends on vehicle + duration. |
| Sensitivity/redness modulation (Matrixyl 3000 claims) | Possible but variable | Often attributed to palmitoyl tetrapeptide-7 and IL-6-linked narratives. |
7) Safety and tolerability
For most users, Matrixyl-type peptides are considered well tolerated in leave-on cosmetics, with adverse events primarily being:
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mild irritation, stinging, or contact dermatitis (usually vehicle/preservative-driven rather than peptide-specific),
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heightened sensitivity when layered with strong actives (retinoids, acids) depending on formulation.
A 2025 review summarizes palmitoyl pentapeptide-4 as generally safe and non-sensitizing at commonly used levels in cosmetic contexts (as reported in the literature it cites).
8) Formulation and use considerations (what actually determines results)
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Concentration: Many references discuss ~3% of the supplier blend as a common usage level; actual active peptide content in a “blend” can be much lower (supplier-dependent).
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Vehicle matters: penetration and stability are driven by emulsion type, solvents/humectants, and pH.
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Timeline: Expect changes over 8–12+ weeks for appearance metrics in most realistic regimens (consistent with typical topical anti-aging study durations).
9) Bottom line
Matrixyl (palmitoyl pentapeptide-4) and Matrixyl 3000 (palmitoyl tripeptide-1 + palmitoyl tetrapeptide-7) are credible cosmetic peptides with a coherent mechanistic rationale (ECM signaling ± inflammation modulation) and a clinical record that supports modest improvements in the appearance of wrinkles and skin texture when formulated well and used consistently.
If you tell me which product you mean—Matrixyl (PPP-4) vs Matrixyl 3000 vs the newer Matrixyl Synthe’6 line—I can produce a comparative matrix (mechanism, best use-case, evidence strength, typical use level, and compatibility with retinoids/acids/vitamin C).