Publication | Closed Access
Changes of skin collagen orientation associated with chronological aging as probed by polarized-FTIR micro-imaging
43
Citations
30
References
2014
Year
Tissue EngineeringEngineeringBiomedical EngineeringDermatologyLight Scattering SpectroscopyChronological Skin AgingTissue ImagingExperimental DermatologyMatrix BiologyBiophysicsCutaneous BiologyPolarized-ftir Micro-imagingCollagen OrientationBiomedical ImagingDermal CollagenSkin Collagen OrientationMedicineHuman TissueDermal StructureExtracellular Matrix
During chronological skin aging, alterations in dermal structural proteins cause morphological modifications. Modifications are probably due to collagen fiber (type I collagen) rearrangement and reorientation with aging that have not been researched until now. FTIR microspectroscopy appears as an interesting method to study protein structure under normal and pathological conditions. Associated with a polarizer, this vibrational technique permits us to probe collagen orientation within skin tissue sections, by computing the ratio of integrated intensities of amide I and amide II bands. In this study, we used the polarized-FTIR imaging to evaluate molecular modifications of dermal collagen during chronological aging. The data processing of polarized infrared data revealed that type I collagen fibers become parallel to the skin surface in aged skin dermis. Our approach could find innovative applications in dermatology as well as in cosmetics.
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