Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
1252474 | Chemistry and Physics of Lipids | 2008 | 10 Pages |
Cholesterol and plant phytosterols are lipophilic compounds solubilized by intestinal micelles in a competitive manner. In this work, we used radioactive cholesterol- and phytosterol-loaded oil-in-water microemulsions to follow their incorporation and mutual competition in HaCaT keratinocytes, SZ95 sebocytes, and skin pieces in cultures. Dynamic light scattering showed homogenous nanostructures of 10.5 ± 1.5 nm diameter and cryo-transmission electron microscopy confirmed the presence of uniform spherical droplets of 7.0 ± 1.0 nm diameter. Up to 320 nmol/ml of cholesterol can be solubilized and transported into cells with minimal toxic effect by 0.5 wt% nanodroplets in a cell medium. Phytosterols inhibit incorporation of cholesterol into cells, in vitro, at molar ratios (phytosterols/cholesterol) of 4 and above. The loaded nanodroplets accumulate in intracellular vesicles (presumably endosomes). No metabolic conversion of cholesterol or phytosterols was found in these cells, in vitro, after 24 h, at 37 °C.