human oligopeptide-1,Sh-Oligopeptide-1

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human oligopeptide-1,Sh-Oligopeptide-1

ALSO-CALLED-LIKE-THIS: Epidermal Growth Factor, rh-Oligopeptide-1

WHAT-IT-DOES: cell-communicating ingredient

Official CosIng Information

All Functions: skin conditioning

Description: sh-oligopeptide-1 is a single chain recombinant human peptide, produced by fermentation in e. coli. the starting gene is synthesized to be identical to the human gene which codes for epidermal growth factor. it contains a maximum of 53 amino acids which may contain disulfide bonds and/or sugar. the protein consists of the proper sequence of the standard amino acids

Company qualification

Details

Sh-Oligopeptide-1 is the famous molecule, which is also called Epidermal Growth Factor or EGF. Chemically speaking, Growth Factors are largish peptides or smallish proteins, or to put it in another way, medium-length amino acid sequences (EGF consists of 53 amino acids).  Biologically speaking, Growth Factors are cellular signal molecules that can stimulate cell growth, proliferation, healing and/or differentiation. 

There are lots of Growth Factors and EGF is just one of them. The topic of “Growth Factors and skincare” is a big, confusing and controversial one and we will try our best to summarize the story for you, including the pros and the cons. 

EGF is a special snowflake when it comes to skincare as it was the first Growth Factor that made its way into cosmetic products and it is also the most common one. The American biochemist, Stanley Cohen discovered EGF and was awarded a Noble prize in 1986 for it. As the Noble prize may signify, the molecule is significant and powerful and directly stimulates the proliferation of epidermal cells. 

When it comes to Sh-Oligopeptide-1 in a cosmetic product, it has pretty well-established wound healing and skin renewal properties. It might even do more than that. According to a 2012 study on a serum containing barley bioengineered epidermal growth factor, “clinical evaluations showed statistically significant improvement in the appearance of fine lines and rhytids, skin texture, pore size, and various dyschromatic conditions apparent within the first month of use, and continuing improvement trends for the duration of the study” (which was 3 months).

This all sounds amazing, “give me some EGF Serum”, we can hear you say! But as we wrote in the intro, the topic is complex and controversial so here are some of the questions that keep coming up around slathering EGF all over our face. 

The first and biggest concern is that if EGF is so good at stimulating cell proliferation, how does it relate to cancer? Is the definition of cancer not “cells proliferating out of control”?  Most experts agree on this answer: EGF is mitogenic (= stimulates cell proliferation) but not mutagenic (= does not alter the cell to make it cancerous). If you do not have cancer, you will not get cancer from EGF. However, if you have cancerous cells, EGF will help them to spread, just like it helps healthy cells. So if you have a lot of moles, excessive UV exposure in the past, or if you have any of the skin cancer risk factors, we suggest you should think twice about using EGF products. The same is true if you have psoriasis, a skin disease related to the abnormal growth of epidermal skin cells. You do not want to add fuel to the fire with EGF. 

Other (less serious) concerns are if EGF can properly penetrate the skin (as it is a medium-sized, polar molecule, so a special delivery system is probably needed), if it can affect collagen synthesis (or just works on the surface plumping up only the upmost layers of the skin) and if it has beneficial effects at all when used in isolation versus when used in a “conditioned media” that contains lots of growth factors resembling the synergistic balance found in the skin. 

Overall, our impression is that EGF is definitely a potent molecule. Some EGF products have a cult-like following adding anecdotal evidence to the clinical studies showing EGF has a beneficial effect on the skin. If you like experimenting, by all means, go ahead (unless you have psoriasis or high skin cancer risk factors), but if you are a better safe than sorry type, stick to daily SPF + a good retinoid product. This duo is still the golden standard of anti-aging.

Are you interested in Growth Factors and skincare? We have some more here:

  • Human Fibroblast Conditioned Media – a growth factor cocktail used in some cosmetic products
  • Insulin-like growth factor 1, aka sh-Oligopeptide -2 – a pal of EGF composed of 70 amino acids
  •  Vascular Endothelial Growth Factor, aka Sh-Polypeptide-9 – part of a GF cocktail trade named BIO-Placenta

SH-Polypeptide-1

ALSO-CALLED-LIKE-THIS: Basic Fibroblast Growth Factor, FGF2, rh-Polypeptide-1

WHAT-IT-DOES: cell-communicating ingredient

Official CosIng Information

All Functions: skin conditioning

Description: sh-polypeptide-1 is a single chain synthetic human peptide, produced by fermentation in e. coli. the starting gene is a synthesized copy of the human gene which codes for basic fibroblast growth factor used as such or adapted to the production host. it contains a maximum of 288 amino acids which may contain disulfide bonds and/or glycosylation. the protein consists of the proper sequence of the 20 standard amino acids.

Details

Sh-Polypeptide-1 is a cell signaling protein also called Basic Fibroblast Growth Factor and is twin sister to Acidic Fibroblast Growth Factor. We can write here pretty much the same things as we did on aFGF: it is a mitogenic (= stimulates cell proliferation) ingredient that stimulates fibroblast cell growth and proliferation. According to manufacturer info, it also stimulates the synthesis of collagen and other extracellular-matrix (the gooey stuff between cells) components. 

Growth Factors and skincare is a big, complicated and controversial topic, so if you wanna know more, we have a more detailed explanation on Epidermal Growth Factor, the most common one used in skincare.

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