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Author Topic: Retardation of Senescence in Isolated Hair Follicles- apple stem cells  (Read 5881 times)
Only Natural
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Posts: 25


« on: May 24, 2009, 02:11:17 am »

Not a miracle ingredient..but I do find it very interesting.

http://www.mibellebiochemistry.com/pdfs/Stimulation_of_stem_cells_for_real_skin_rejuvenation_CosmeticsDesign_08_2008.pdf

Quote
Retardation of Senescence in Isolated Hair Follicles
Human hair follicles can be isolated by
microdissection from skin fragments that are left after
facelift surgery. Only follicles in the anagen phase are
collected. Hair follicles are mini organs that represent
a natural coculture model of epidermal and
melanocyte stem cells and differentiated cells. The
follicles can be maintained in a growth medium where
they elongate until about day 14. Then the follicle
cells gradually become senescent or undergo apoptosis
which is a programmed cell death. Because of the lack
of blood circulation, isolated hair follicles cannot be
kept alive and growing for a longer period. But
isolated hair follicles are test models to screen for
actives that can delay the necrosis process. Addition of
0.2% of an extract of Uttwiler Spätlauber stem cells
was found to slightly but clearly postpone senescenceand
apoptosis-induced necrosis. Figure 6 shows that
follicles kept in presence of the Uttwiler Spätlauber
stem cell extract continued to elongate until day 18,
whereas the control follicles started to shrink after day
14.

A lot more info in that pdf.
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DrYechiel
President, Elsom Research Co., Inc --- Scientific Editor, Journal of Topical Formulations
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« Reply #1 on: May 24, 2009, 10:34:33 pm »

Hello Only Natural,

First I would like to say that for several months we have experimented formulating with the apple stem cells extract you mentioned, and that we are going to offer the ingredient in The Formulator in the near future.

Second, the article you present is an internal article conducted and presented by the company which makes the stem cells extract, and although that by itself is not a diminishing factor, there is a diminishing factor in that they did not differentiate between the stem cells’ effect and the effect of the culture media in which the stem cells were grown. Tissue culture media is loaded with nutrients and growth factors and so is the media in which the stem cells are grown. A competent experiment would attempt to differentiate between the respective effects of the growth media and the stem cells. The material they tested (and which we also used for testing the possibilities in formulating stem cells extract) is a combination of stem cells and their culture media. Therefore, they did not exclude the possibility that the effects are due to the culture media in which the stem cells were grown rather than the stem cells themselves. One other control that they did not conduct is to see whether effects of H2O2 (hydrogen peroxide) could be alleviated by other anti-oxidants. If the stem cells act primarily as anti-oxidants, it’s good, nice, important, but nothing really special that cannot be achieved with other more powerful and inexpensive anti-oxidants.

Over half a century ago it was established that cells in culture have a limited number of divisions they can undergo. Many of the early important studies in the field were conducted by Leonard Hayflich. Tissue culture models of aging are still problematic when compared to actual aging, but some models are more suitable than others in studying different aspects of aging. The terms “apoptosis” and “senescence” are used generically in the study and may have nothing to do with actual apoptosis or senescence. You see, when you poison cells with powerful oxidants you damage them or kill them. If someone gets hit by a 10 pound hammer on the head he is seriously injured, which is not the same as undergoing accelerated “senescence”. He may also die of the injuries, which does not mean he undergoes “apoptosis”. The generic use of these terms does not reflect actual apoptosis or senescence but is rather an attempt to link between a product’s activity and some of the “big issues” in biology.

Growth of follicles and their ability to recover outside a poorly-supporting scalp has been proven to be a solid fact. I discussed that at length in answering questions at the “hairsite” forum regarding an experiment where human scalp hair from balding regions recovered after implantation into nude mice skin http://www.hairsite.com/hair-loss/forum_entry-id-50700.html and  supplemented in http://www.hairsite.com/hair-loss/forum_entry-id-51409.html. Tissue culture is not as accommodating as the mice skin and will accommodate follicle growth for about 11-18 days depending on which culture media is used and other conditions. The person or company which will succeed in patenting a culture medium in which follicles can grow for a long time, say, several months, may get into significant financial benefits as a result. The 2 days extension in follicles’ growth in media is indeed significant but not significant ‘enough to exclude the possibility (a very strong possibility) that it is a result of the variation in the media (adding plant tissue culture media into the follicle growth media). In addition, this extension of growth is not outside current variables of growth in different follicle growing settings. Moreover, there was no mention that stem cells within the follicle were stimulated and that there is a connection between that effect and the increase of “culture time” growth for the follicles. Indeed, if the time extension was due to stem cell stimulation and differentiation and growth, we would expect a much longer time effect. The growth medium of the follicles is a time-limiting factor and the apple stem cells medium (with the stem cells) is improving the original growth medium accommodation. That is most likely what happens, an improvement of the growth medium rather than an intrinsic change such as stimulation of follicle stem cells. In a work I did in the late seventies on beating heart cells in culture (rat heart cells in culture beat at a high rate for 7 days and then the rate is slowed until at 14 days in culture they stop beating), I succeeded in recovering the “young” high rate beating of 14 days cultured heart cells by changing their membrane lipid composition with small phosphatidylcholine liposomes. You can read about  that in “Yechiel, E., and Y. Barenholz. 1985. Relationships between membrane lipid composition and biological properties of rat myocytes. J. Biol. Chem. 260:9123-9131”. This was an example of reversing “culture aging” and the experiment was also conducted on whole animals reversing many age-related changed in old rats. You can read about it in ”1989, 'Lipid Replacement Therapy', for treatment of age-related disorders. U.S.A. Patent No. 4,812,314”.

In conclusion, I don’t see a negative reason (why not to use the material) and there are encouraging good reasons for using it, whether or not they have anything to do with the stem cells themselves. The high cost of the material is a problem when you compare it to possible benefits, and it may not be cost effective to be used in commercial batches before there is an adequate number of customers who may wish to purchase the product. Our operation with The Formulator is on the other hand a valid option for people who wish to try ingredients without a commitment on our side for producing large expensive batches which may not have a sufficient customer base.
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Elishalom Yechiel, Ph.D
www.elsomresearch.com * skincare nanotechnologies
www.new-equilibrium-skincare.com/cosmeceuticals  * retail cosmeceuticals
www.the-formulator.com * personalized cosmeceuticals
www.topical-formulations.com * the Journal
www.nanosomin.com/news * the Blog
Only Natural
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Posts: 25


« Reply #2 on: June 22, 2009, 03:36:11 am »

A belated thanks for the response.  These apple stem cells sure are spreading like wildfire..I'm seeing them in so many skin products these days. I hope there's actually something to them other than this stem cell craze..which may be the case after reading your post a few times.  Are you aware of any study/studies going on,  maybe by the company itself, with this stuff on actual humans(with hair loss, of course)?

Also, when will the ingredient be added to the Formulator, and will it be liposomal(as the company can provide it) or nanosomal.. using your own tech?

Decided to search those patent/studies you were referring to. I'm going to take some Tylenol(or maybe willowbark) and do some reading:
 
http://www.jbc.org/cgi/reprint/260/16/9123

http://www.freepatentsonline.com/4812314.html

From Baltimore to Texas? Well I don't blame you..but that's quite a move  Cheesy
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DrYechiel
President, Elsom Research Co., Inc --- Scientific Editor, Journal of Topical Formulations
Subject-Matter Expert
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Posts: 53



WWW
« Reply #3 on: June 28, 2009, 10:02:18 pm »

Hello Only Natural,

Thank you. The apple stem cells have a good sales pitch and many manufacturers feel that their products will sell better with that material in. I believe it may be effective in some modest ways but I am not sure at this time that it is cost effective from the viewpoint of the user. I asked the manufacturer’s rep if we can receive the material in a concentrated form because their commercial material is already very diluted, and without their liposomes. I am still waiting for an answer from their US distributor. They will probably not be willing to do that for small amounts because it may be extra effort on their side but if they do we will encapsulate it.

I would just add that the use of this material in a shampoo is a bit less effective than in a topical because the liposomes in the material will dissolve by the detergent in the shampoo and it may degrade some of the growth factors in the material. Also, exposure time is short in a shampoo and the dilution of the material will be significant or the cost of the shampoo will be very high. I think that apple stem cells are a good start, just as kinetin which is a plant growth factor was also found to be very effective on animal tissue. Plant growth factors seem to have some merit in humans and maybe one of these days people will sprinkle Miracle Grow or its much more expensive “specially made human version” on their skin and head and have some rejuvenating effects.

Be careful not to take Tylenol together with willowbark (which is the natural form of aspirin); they don’t always agree with each other.
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Elishalom Yechiel, Ph.D
www.elsomresearch.com * skincare nanotechnologies
www.new-equilibrium-skincare.com/cosmeceuticals  * retail cosmeceuticals
www.the-formulator.com * personalized cosmeceuticals
www.topical-formulations.com * the Journal
www.nanosomin.com/news * the Blog
MelissaF
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Posts: 1


« Reply #4 on: October 28, 2010, 08:57:00 am »

I have read in some forum on the internet about Retardation of Senescence in Isolated Hair Follicles- apple stem cells and found this,Ingrown hair
Herbal blend of Therapeutic Chinese Herbs

* Apple Stem Cells, specialized long-living plant cells that have unique growth characteristics to invigorate hair growth

* Swertia Extract increases microcirculation and stimulates weak hair follicles to enhance hair growth

* Glycyrrhiza Glabra Root Extract naturally aids in baldness-prevention

* Paeonia Albiflora Root Extract controls premature balding

* Ginseng and Prunus Persica (Peach) Seed Extracts promote re-growth for receding hairlines and frontal baldness

* Polygonum Multiflorum Extract, regularly used by Chinese doctors to treat thinning hair, also restores the texture and color of graying hair.
Regards,
Ali.
« Last Edit: October 30, 2010, 11:53:23 am by MelissaF » Logged
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