Zsófia Varga-Medveczky's research while affiliated with Pázmány Péter Catholic University and other places

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Publications (8)


Figure 3. The static Franz diffusion cells (left) and the dynamic skin-on-a-chips (right). Both in the Franz cell and the skin-on-a-chip, the direction of the diffusion is vertical, but while in the Franz cell there is continuous stirring with a helical stirrer, in the chip, there is a continuous flow of the perfusion fluid below the skin sample.
Figure 7. Accumulation of the two model drugs (caffeine and quinidine) in the skins and skin substitutes determined by Confocal Raman Spectroscopy. Caffeine penetration in mechanically pretreated rat skins (A) and in EpiDerm HRE tissues (MatTek) (B). Quinidine penetration in mechanically pretreated rat skins (C) and in EpiDerm HRE tissues (MatTek) (D). Four rat skins and 1-3 EpiDerm human-reconstructed epidermis were studied. N = 8-10 different z-profiling positions were applied for each individual sample.
Figure 8. Transepidermal water loss (TEWL) as the indicator of dermal barrier function, determined in (1) rat skin samples after 10 tape strippings before any kind of treatment or after 5h exposition to 2% caffeine or quinidine cream in the skin-on-a-chip device; (2) in EpiDerm TM HRE tissues before any kind of treatment or after 5 h exposition to 2% caffeine or quinidine cream in the skin-on-achip device. N = 11 for the skin before, and N = 3−4 for the other groups. Data are expressed as means ± SEM.
Structural and Functional Analysis of Excised Skins and Human Reconstructed Epidermis with Confocal Raman Spectroscopy and in Microfluidic Diffusion Chambers
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  • Full-text available

August 2022

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190 Reads

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13 Citations

Pharmaceutics

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Hichem Kichou

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Katalin Döme

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Franciska Erdő

Several ex vivo and in vitro skin models are available in the toolbox of dermatological and cosmetic research. Some of them are widely used in drug penetration testing. The excised skins show higher variability, while the in vitro skins provide more reproducible data. The aim of the current study was to compare the chemical composition of different skin models (excised rat skin, excised human skin and human-reconstructed epidermis) by measurement of ceramides, cholesterol, lactate, urea, protein and water at different depths of the tissues. The second goal was to compile a testing system, which includes a skin-on-a-chip diffusion setup and a confocal Raman spectroscopy for testing drug diffusion across the skin barrier and accumulation in the tissue models. A hydrophilic drug caffeine and the P-glycoprotein substrate quinidine were used in the study as topical cream formulations. The results indicate that although the transdermal diffusion of quinidine is lower, the skin accumulation was comparable for the two drugs. The various skin models showed different chemical compositions. The human skin was abundant in ceramides and cholesterol, while the reconstructed skin contained less water and more urea and protein. Based on these results, it can be concluded that skin-on-a-chip and confocal Raman microspectroscopy are suitable for testing drug penetration and distribution at different skin layers within an exposition window. Furthermore, obese human skin should be treated with caution for skin absorption testing due to its unbalanced composition.

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Novel aspects of Raman spectroscopy in skin research

July 2022

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251 Reads

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23 Citations

Experimental Dermatology

The analytical technology of Raman spectroscopy has an almost 100‐year history. During this period many modifications and developments happened in the method like discovery of laser, improvements in optical elements and sensitivity of spectrometer and also more advanced light detection systems. Many types of the innovative techniques appeared (e.g. Transmittance Raman spectroscopy, Coherent Raman Scattering microscopy, Surface Enhanced Raman scattering and Confocal Raman spectroscopy/microscopy). This review article gives a short description about these different Raman techniques and their possible applications. Then a short statistical part is coming about the appearance of Raman spectroscopy in the scientific literature from the beginnings to these days. The third part of the paper shows the main application options of the technique (especially confocal Raman spectroscopy) in skin research, including skin composition analysis, drug penetration monitoring and analysis, diagnostic utilizations in dermatology and cosmeto‐scientific applications. At the end the possible role of artificial intelligence in Raman data analysis and the regulatory aspect of this techniques in dermatology are briefly summarized. For the future of Raman Spectroscopy increasing clinical relevance and in vivo applications can be predicted with spreading of non‐destructive methods and appearance with the most advanced instruments with rapid analysis time.


Characterization and ex vivo evaluation of excised skin samples as substitutes for human dermal barrier in pharmaceutical and dermatological studies

June 2022

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116 Reads

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8 Citations

Skin Research and Technology

Skin Research and Technology

Background Excised animal and human skins are frequently used in permeability testing in pharmaceutical research. Several factors exist that may have influence on the results. In the current study some of the skin parameters that may affect drug permeability were analysed for human, mouse, rat and pig skin. Materials and methods Classic biophysical skin parameters were measured (e.g. pH, hydration, permittivity, transepidermal water loss). Physiological characteristics of the skins were also analysed by confocal Raman spectroscopy, scanning electron microscopy and two‐photon microscopy. Results Based on biophysical testing, skin barrier function was damaged in psoriatic mouse skin and in marketed pig skin. Hydration and pH values were similar among the species, but freezing and thawing reduced the water content of the skins and shifted the surface pH to acidic. Aging reduced hydration and permittivity, resulting in impaired barrier function. Mechanical sensitization used in permeability studies resulted in proportional thinning of dead epidermis. Discussion Results indicate that depending on the scientific question it should be considered whether fresh or frozen tissue is used, and for certain purposes rodent skins are well usable. The structure of the skin tissue (ceramide, cholesterol, keratin, natural moisturizing factor or urea) is similar in rats and mice, but due to the higher skin thickness the lipid distribution is different in porcine skin. Psoriasis led to irregular chemical composition of the skin. Conclusion A comprehensive evaluation of skin samples of four species was performed. The biophysical and microscopic observations should be considered when selecting drug penetration models and experimental conditions.


Figure 1. (A) Clinical signs of topical Aldara and vaseline treatment on the dorsal skin of C57BL/6J mice on each day of the experiment. (B) Representative images of blood perfusion changes on C57BL/6J mice dorsal skin on each day of the experiment induced by topical application of Aldara or vaseline. (blue-green-yellow: low perfusion, red: high perfusion areas). (C) Percent change in skin thickness after Aldara or vaseline treatment in C57BL/6J mice. Data are expressed as percent increase of back skin thickness compared with 0 hrs baseline initial values. Data are means ± SEM for n = 5/group. *** p < 0.001, (D) Percent change in dorsal skin blood flow after Aldara or vaseline treatment in C57BL/6J mice. Data are expressed as percentage of blood perfusion change compared to 0 h values. Data are means ± SEM for n = 5/group. ** p < 0.005, (E) Percent change in body weight after Aldara or vaseline treatment in C57BL/6J mice. Data are expressed as percent change of weight compared with 0 h baseline initial values. Data are means ± SEM for n = 5/group. *** p < 0.001.
Figure 7. Cont.
Statistical evaluation of the scanning electronmicroscopic pictures after computerized image analysis using the Mann-Whitney test for comparison of control (VAS) and psoriatic (IMQ) skins in regard to the number of gaps (N G ) and number of pixels in cells (N PC ). The p values < 0.05 are considered as statistically significant differences.
The main endogenous fluorophore component of excised skins.
Drug Delivery through the Psoriatic Epidermal Barrier—A “Skin-On-A-Chip” Permeability Study and Ex Vivo Optical Imaging

April 2022

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110 Reads

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11 Citations

International Journal of Molecular Sciences

Psoriasis is a chronic inflammatory disease with unmet medical needs. To clarify potential therapeutic targets, different animal models have been developed. In the current study, imiquimod-induced psoriasiform dermatitis was used for monitoring the changes in skin thickness, transepidermal water loss, body weight, blood perfusion and drug permeability for a topical cream formulation of caffeine, both in wild type and in knock out mice. Morphological characterization of control and diseased tissues was performed by scanning electron microscopy and two-photon microscopy. The chemically induced psoriatic group showed increased skin permeability for the model drug during disease progression. In wild type and TRPA1 KO mice, however, enhanced skin thickness and hyperkeratosis blocked further increase of drug penetration at the late phase (96 h). These results indicate that topical drug therapy can be more effective in early phases of plaque development, when skin thickness is lower. Although paracellular connections (tight junctions) are looser in the advanced phase, hyperkeratosis blocks drug delivery through the transappendageal routes. Novel drug formulations may have the potency for effective drug delivery across the epidermal barrier even in the advanced phase. For development of more effective topical drugs, further research is proposed to explore drug penetration both in healthy and diseased conditions.


Skin-on-a-Chip Technology for Testing Transdermal Drug Delivery—Starting Points and Recent Developments

November 2021

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529 Reads

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19 Citations

Pharmaceutics

During the last decades, several technologies were developed for testing drug delivery through the dermal barrier. Investigation of drug penetration across the skin can be important in topical pharmaceutical formulations and also in cosmeto-science. The state-of- the-art in the field of skin diffusion measurements, different devices, and diffusion platforms used, are summarized in the introductory part of this review. Then the methodologies applied at Pázmány Péter Catholic University are shown in detail. The main testing platforms (Franz diffusion cells, skin-on-a-chip devices) and the major scientific projects (P-glycoprotein interaction in the skin; new skin equivalents for diffusion purposes) are also presented in one section. The main achievements of our research are briefly summarized: (1) new skin-on-a-chip microfluidic devices were validated as tools for drug penetration studies for the skin; (2) P-glycoprotein transport has an absorptive orientation in the skin; (3) skin samples cannot be used for transporter interaction studies after freezing and thawing; (4) penetration of hydrophilic model drugs is lower in aged than in young skin; (5) mechanical sensitization is needed for excised rodent and pig skins for drug absorption measurements. Our validated skin-on-a-chip platform is available for other research groups to use for testing and for utilizing it for different purposes.


Age-Related Inflammatory Balance Shift, Nasal Barrier Function, and Cerebro-Morphological Status in Healthy and Diseased Rodents

July 2021

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94 Reads

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4 Citations

Increased blood–brain barrier (BBB) permeability and extensive neuronal changes have been described earlier in both healthy and pathological aging like apolipoprotein B-100 (APOB-100) and amyloid precursor protein (APP)–presenilin-1 (PSEN1) transgenic mouse models. APOB-100 hypertriglyceridemic model is a useful tool to study the link between cerebrovascular pathology and neurodegeneration, while APP–PSEN1 humanized mouse is a model of Alzheimer’s disease. The aim of the current study was to characterize the inflammatory changes in the brain with healthy aging and in neurodegeneration. Also, the cerebro-morphological and cognitive alterations have been investigated. The nose-to-brain delivery of a P-glycoprotein substrate model drug (quinidine) was monitored in the disease models and compared with the age-matched controls. Our results revealed an inflammatory balance shift in both the healthy aged and neurodegenerative models. In normal aging monocyte chemoattractant protein-1, stem cell factor and Rantes were highly upregulated indicating a stimulated leukocyte status. In APOB-100 mice, vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF), platelet-derived growth factor (PDGF-BB), and interleukin-17A (IL-17A) were induced (vascular reaction), while in APP–PSEN1 mice resistin, IL-17A and GM-CSF were mostly upregulated. The nasal drug absorption was similar in the brain and blood indicating the molecular bypass of the BBB. The learning and memory tests showed no difference in the cognitive performance of healthy aged and young animals. Based on these results, it can be concluded that various markers of chronic inflammation are present in healthy aged and diseased animals. In APOB-100 mice, a cerebro-ventricular dilation can also be observed. For development of proper anti-aging and neuroprotective compounds, further studies focusing on the above inflammatory targets are suggested.


Figure 1. Skin equivalent sample holder device. (a) Scanning electron microscopic image of the electrospun PCL nanomesh consisting of filaments with sub-micron diameter. Scale bar: 3 µm. (b) Filament diameter distribution of the electrospun nanomesh, obtained from n = 4 independent samples. (c) The assembled sample holder device, scale bar represents 1 mm. (d) Schematic drawing depicting the parts of the device. (e) Schematic cross section of the assembled sample holder device. The electrospun nanomesh serves as the substrate of the cells and is stretched across the sample holder containing collagen-I gel. The mesh is hold in place by a tightly fitting cone shaped ring.
Figure 2. Histology of skin equivalents. (a) Live/dead labeled image of a monolayer of HaCaT keratocytes, imaged on the electrospun membrane at day 25 in culture. Calcein (green) fluorescence shows live cells while dead cell nuclei are identified by ethidium (red) fluorescence. Co-localization of green and red fluorescence appears as yellow. (b) Toluidine blue-stained semi-thin section of a monolayer of cells at day 18 in culture. Blue arrows point to cell-cell junctions, asterisks indicate cell nuclei with apparent nucleoli, red arrowhead marks an apoptotic cell. (c,d) Frozen cross-sections of a keratinocyte culture kept in culture for 28 days and at the air-liquid interface (ALI) for 14 days. (c) Cells and nuclei are visualized with calcein (green) and NucBlue (blue) fluorescence. (d) Phasecontrast image of the same field shown in (c) merged with ethidium fluorescence (red), identifying dead cells. Dotted line indicates the border between the cell layer and the electrospun membrane. Scale bars: 20 µm.
Figure 3. Transdermal transport measurements using skin equivalents and human skin. A photo (a) and schematic drawing (b) shows the sample holder device fitted into a microfluidic Franz chamber inside an incubator box. The cap of the chamber immobilized the sample holder device and held the caffeine-containing cream in close contact with the skin equivalent. Medium was transfused through the microfluidic chamber, and fractions of the medium leaving the chamber were collected every 30 min. (c) Caffeine concentration in the collected fractions was measured by spectrophotometry and is shown as a function of time. Caffeine exposition was started at t = 0. Red, magenta and teal colored symbols represent the average caffeine concentration obtained from the skin equivalent, human skin and cell-free samples, respectively. Error bars represent SEM, from n = 3 independent experiments. The difference between concentration readings from the marked mesh-only and SE samples is significant (p = 1.2 · 10 −7 , n = 12 in each group).
Development and Evaluation of a Human Skin Equivalent in a Semiautomatic Microfluidic Diffusion Chamber

June 2021

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116 Reads

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19 Citations

Pharmaceutics

There is an increasing demand for transdermal transport measurements to optimize topical drug formulations and to achieve proper penetration profile of cosmetic ingredients. Reflecting ethical concerns the use of both human and animal tissues is becoming more restricted. Therefore, the focus of dermal research is shifting towards in vitro assays. In the current proof-of-concept study a three-layer skin equivalent using human HaCaT keratinocytes, an electrospun polycaprolactone mesh and a collagen-I gel was compared to human excised skin samples. We measured the permeability of the samples for 2% caffeine cream using a miniaturized dynamic diffusion cell (“skin-on-a-chip” microfluidic device). Caffeine delivery exhibits similar transport kinetics through the artificial skin and the human tissue: after a rapid rise, a long-lasting high concentration steady state develops. This is markedly distinct from the kinetics measured when using cell-free constructs, where a shorter release was observable. These results imply that both the established skin equivalent and the microfluidic diffusion chamber can serve as a suitable base for further development of more complex tissue substitutes.


Development of Skin-On-A-Chip Platforms for Different Utilizations: Factors to Be Considered

March 2021

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6,397 Reads

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36 Citations

Micromachines

There is increasing interest in miniaturized technologies in diagnostics, therapeutic testing, and biomedicinal fundamental research. The same is true for the dermal studies in topical drug development, dermatological disease pathology testing, and cosmetic science. This review aims to collect the recent scientific literature and knowledge about the application of skin-on-a-chip technology in drug diffusion studies, in pharmacological and toxicological experiments, in wound healing, and in fields of cosmetic science (ageing or repair). The basic mathematical models are also presented in the article to predict physical phenomena, such as fluid movement, drug diffusion, and heat transfer taking place across the dermal layers in the chip using Computational Fluid Dynamics techniques. Soon, it can be envisioned that animal studies might be at least in part replaced with skin-on-a-chip technology leading to more reliable results close to study on humans. The new technology is a cost-effective alternative to traditional methods used in research institutes, university labs, and industry. With this article, the authors would like to call attention to a new investigational family of platforms to refresh the researchers’ theranostics and preclinical, experimental toolbox.

Citations (8)


... The capillaries present the highest cross-sectional surface for fluid perfusion in the body. The currently available organ-on-a-chip or skin-on-a-chip systems apply different perfusion flow rates depending on the microchannel design and the placement and integration of cells or ex vivo tissues in the devices [5][6][7][8][9]. To achieve physiologically relevant conditions, the shear stress on the channel wall and cells and the tissue preparations should be considered. ...

Reference:

Fluid Dynamics Optimization of Microfluidic Diffusion Systems for Assessment of Transdermal Drug Delivery: An Experimental and Simulation Study
Structural and Functional Analysis of Excised Skins and Human Reconstructed Epidermis with Confocal Raman Spectroscopy and in Microfluidic Diffusion Chambers

Pharmaceutics

... 2c, 2d). CH 2 oscillations are illustrated by peak at 1438 cm -1 [46], which broadens in all spectra of tumors at both laser excitation wavelengths. Its area decreases for BCC and SCC and increases for papilloma at , increases in BCC and stays unchanged in SCC and papilloma at . ...

Novel aspects of Raman spectroscopy in skin research

Experimental Dermatology

... The blood, lymphatic and extracellular matrix movements and shear stress should also be considered to reproduce the in vivo-like, dynamic physiological microenvironment [140]. Permeability of skins from different species or humans were compared in SoC [141] and changes in the barrier function under diseased conditions were also studied [142]. Finally, the integration of sensors in the SoC should also be considered for real-time monitoring of skin function [143]. ...

Characterization and ex vivo evaluation of excised skin samples as substitutes for human dermal barrier in pharmaceutical and dermatological studies
Skin Research and Technology

Skin Research and Technology

... The blood, lymphatic and extracellular matrix movements and shear stress should also be considered to reproduce the in vivo-like, dynamic physiological microenvironment [140]. Permeability of skins from different species or humans were compared in SoC [141] and changes in the barrier function under diseased conditions were also studied [142]. Finally, the integration of sensors in the SoC should also be considered for real-time monitoring of skin function [143]. ...

Drug Delivery through the Psoriatic Epidermal Barrier—A “Skin-On-A-Chip” Permeability Study and Ex Vivo Optical Imaging

International Journal of Molecular Sciences

... The skin permeability tests were performed in (1) a single-channel microfluidic diffusion chamber (sMDC, described earlier in detail by Lukács et al., 2019 [5] and Varga-Medveczky et al., 2021 [14]), (2) a multichannel microfluidic chamber, and 3) the LiveBox2 IVTech system (Figure 1). The technical details of the different devices are summarized in Table 2. ...

Skin-on-a-Chip Technology for Testing Transdermal Drug Delivery—Starting Points and Recent Developments

Pharmaceutics

... Aging and cellular senescence are characterized by prolonged activation of in ammatory pathways and increased oxidative stress. 29,30 It has been observed that as cells age, they sustain more DNA damage from oxidants. 31,32 In this study, serum IL6 levels increased and TNF levels increased in geriatric rats. ...

Age-Related Inflammatory Balance Shift, Nasal Barrier Function, and Cerebro-Morphological Status in Healthy and Diseased Rodents
Frontiers in Neuroscience

Frontiers in Neuroscience

... The capillaries present the highest cross-sectional surface for fluid perfusion in the body. The currently available organ-on-a-chip or skin-on-a-chip systems apply different perfusion flow rates depending on the microchannel design and the placement and integration of cells or ex vivo tissues in the devices [5][6][7][8][9]. To achieve physiologically relevant conditions, the shear stress on the channel wall and cells and the tissue preparations should be considered. ...

Development and Evaluation of a Human Skin Equivalent in a Semiautomatic Microfluidic Diffusion Chamber

Pharmaceutics

... 3D microfluidic systems, such as organ-on-a-chip (OoC) and skin-on-chip (SoC), revolutionize organ function simulation, offering realistic disease models and treatment testing. [91,92]. They are faster and more cost-effective than traditional animal testing, and can be used to investigate various skin phenomena, including wound healing, barrier function, and the effects of cosmetic products [93]. ...

Development of Skin-On-A-Chip Platforms for Different Utilizations: Factors to Be Considered

Micromachines