Drug – bio-affecting and body treating compositions – Preparations characterized by special physical form – Cosmetic – antiperspirant – dentifrice
Reexamination Certificate
2001-03-15
2003-09-16
Padmanabhan, Sreeni (Department: 1617)
Drug, bio-affecting and body treating compositions
Preparations characterized by special physical form
Cosmetic, antiperspirant, dentifrice
C424S078030, C514S002600, C530S328000, C530S329000, C530S330000
Reexamination Certificate
active
06620419
ABSTRACT:
Aging, particularly of the skin, involves important intimate tissue biochemical disturbances which are manifested by macroscopic modifications, conventionally judged to be undesirable, and which continuously preoccupy both women and men.
Suntanning with natural solar UV, or artificially in beauty salons, is responsible for cutaneous aging well known to dermatologists under the name heliodermia (Dr. C. Musy-Preault, (1994)
The Maladies of the Skin
, Albin Michel ed., Paris).
Other components of our present way of life, such as physical and chemical aggression by pollution; the consumption of alcohol and tobacco, promote and aggravate the aging processes.
Moreover, in the course of private or professional life, the skin, first barrier of the organism against the outside world, is menaced in its integrity by numerous localized aggressions such as cuts, burns, inflammatory reactions. To correct these, the organism has developed a series of reactions, complex and overlapping each other: healing.
The cosmetic industry is continuously searching for new ingredients capable of countering the effects of aging in general and/or promoting cutaneous healing.
To do this, one of the possible approaches consists in promoting the tissue restructuring by neosynthesis of the different elements constituting the skin. Just as cement ensures the cohesion of bricks in a wall and gives it its solidity, the different types of collagens and other mucupolysaccharides, are the constituent elements of cutaneous tissue.
Promoting the synthesis and the incorporation of these molecules is surely necessary but not sufficient by itself. It is also necessary to prepare the terrain by giving it a good basis on which the mechanisms of healing can carry out lasting repairs. In the situations described above, this basis is the extracellular matrix, which is known as the basal layer when it is located at the interface of the epithelium and conjunctive tissue. Improvement or reconstruction of the extracellular matrix is important because it is now known that not only this structure plays “the role of framework stabilizing the physical structure of the tissues” but it also “plays a role . . . in the regulation of the behavior of the cells which are in contact with it—influencing their development, their migration, their proliferization, their form and their functions” (Molecular Biology of the Cell, 3rd edition Medicine-Science, Flammarion, Paris, page 972).
There is accordingly a special interest in two of the principal constituents of this extracellular matrix: the collagens and the glycosaminoglycans (also known as GAGS).
In the framework of this patent, the effects of aging on the collagens and the glycosaminoglycans can be summarized as:
The decrease of synthesis of these molecules by fibroblasts, decrease due to the conjunction of two causes: on the one hand the quantity of renewal of these productive cells decreases with age and, on the other hand the quantity of molecules secreted by these cells also decreases.
When it is considered that collagen represents about 80% of the cutaneous proteins, it is easy to understand that the slightest decrease in its tissue concentration can have important consequences on the mechanical and physiological properties of the skin.
The glycosaminoglycans are capable of fixing large quantities of water. The decrease of their tissue concentration thus gives rise to cutaneous dehydration.
The appearance of structural modifications of the neo-synthesized molecules which leads to the reticulation of the fibers and hence their rigidification.
For collagen, the variations of the a chains modify the distribution of these different forms. For example, the proportion of type III collagen increases in the epidermis when the type IV collagen accumulates in the basal membrane. There have also been observed the appearance of reactions, enzymatic or not (of the Maillard reaction type) which create connections, called crossings, either between two fibers of collagen, or between the collagen itself and glucose molecules, thereby rigidifying the networks of collagen fibers.
Aging manifests itself in the glycosaminoglycans by the imperfect synthesis of their polysaccharide chains and by a decrease in their sulfation. More than with collagens, the radical forms of oxygen degrade the GAGs in an irreversible manner.
The skin thus loses its substance by the decrease in the quantity of its constituents, hardens by the loss of elasticity of the collagen fibers and by dehydration.
All this contributes to giving the aged skin its characteristic appearance: dryness, absence of flexibility, fineness, fragility, more or less numerous wrinkles that are more or less deep.
Healing itself requires, at least partially, similar needs because it is necessary to reconstruct and hence to produce a tissue mass; this implies locally, the increased synthesis of the different cutaneous constituents.
Thus, any product capable of inducing one or more processes increasing locally the synthesis of collagens and glycosaminoglycans, will permit obtaining the effect sought by all those who wish to reduce the cutaneous marks of aging as well as those wishing to improve healing, not only to quicken it but also for the aesthetics and quality of the result.
The invention which is the object of this patent application resides in the fact that we have developed a product which responds to the preceding criteria and of which we have demonstrated the efficacy, in vitro and in vivo, by sophisticated scientific tests.
It is known that the synthesis of collagen can be stimulated (in vitro), in cell cultures, by the C-terminal fragment of collagen I which constitutes the peptide Lys-Thr-S Thr-Lys-Ser (Katayama K. et al.,
Journal of Biological Chemistry
(1993), 259:9941-9944.
Moreover, it is possible to increase the synthesis of the cutaneous glycosaminoglycans by vegetal extracts (for example, in the rat: Chithra P. et al.,
Journal of Ethnopharmacology
(1998), 59:179-186).
Our patent application rests on the discovery, that when administered, alone or in combination with each other, by topical route in vivo, and hence by a method suitable for cosmetics, the peptides of the general formula R
1
-X-Thr-Thr-Lys-(AA)
n
-Y and their salts, wherein:
X representing a basic amino acid of D or L orientation (lysine, arginine, histidine, ornithine, citrulline, sarcosine, statine),
(AA)
n
representing a chain of n amino acids, natural or not, with n varying from 0 to 5,
R
1
being H or a fatty acid chain of 2 to 22 carbons, hydroxylated or not, saturated or not, linear or branched, sulfurated or not, cyclic or not, or a biotin group, or a protective group of the urethane type used in peptide synthesis such as the groups benzyloxycarbonyl (Z), terbutyloxycarbonyl (tBoc), fluorenylmethyloxycarbonyl (Fmoc), allyloxycarbonyl (Alloc)
Y=OR
2
or NR
2
R
3
wherein R
2
and/or R
3
are a hydrogen atom or an aliphatic or aromatic chain of 1 to 22 carbons, hydroxylated or not, saturated or not, linear or branched, sulfurated or not, cyclic or not,
except peptides wherein R
1
=H and X=Lys and Y=OH and with n=0 or (AA)
n
=Ser when n=1,
are capable of increasing in a substantial way the concomitant synthesis of collagen and glycosiminoglycans and that this fact permits obtaining a synergetic effect because thus, the observed result is greater than could be hoped for from the addition of each of its effects.
Thus, the newly-formed collagen fibers overlay each other immediately in the trellis of the glycosiminoglycans of the basal layer newly synthesized; thereby accelerating the process of cutaneous regeneration as well as the mean level of tissue hydration.
The peptides preferably used in this way can be characterized in that n=1, R
1
is a fatty acid chain of 2 to 22 carbons and Y is OH or NH
2
, and more precisely with X=lysine, (AA)
n
=serine, R
1
=the palmitoyl group and Y=OH.
The peptides which are the objects of this application can be obtained either by conventional c
Padmanabhan Sreeni
Sederma
Wells Lauren Q.
Young & Thompson
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