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  • Chemical
    Member
    • May 2014
    • 75

    #61
    Originally posted by Seuxin
    I'm looking for buying a the right Vitamin C Form in order to inhibit dkk1 too
    I forgot to address this question.

    Alot of women on skin forums tend to use vitamin C topically and report having positive effects on skin firmness and elasticity.

    This study shows that even 5% Vit.C demonstrates a clinically significant improvement in photodamaged skin. I'm a bit disappointed they didnt talk much about the vehicle...

    Topical ascorbic acid on photoaged skin. Clinical, topographical and ultrastructural evaluation: double-blind study vs. placebo.

    Vitamin C is known for its antioxidant potential and activity in the collagen biosynthetic pathway. Photoprotective properties of topically applied vitamin C have also been demonstrated, placing this molecule as a potential candidate for use in the prevention and treatment of skin ageing. A topically applied cream containing 5% vitamin C and its excipient were tested on healthy female volunteers presenting with photoaged skin on their low-neck and arms in view to evaluate efficacy and safety of such treatment. A double-blind, randomized trial was performed over a 6-month period, comparing the action of the vitamin C cream vs. excipient on photoaged skin. Clinical assessments included evaluation at the beginning and after 3 and 6 months of daily treatment. They were performed by the investigator and compared with the volunteer self assessment. Skin relief parameters were determined on silicone rubber replicas performed at the same time-points. Cutaneous biopsies were obtained at the end of the trial and investigated using immunohistochemistry and electron microscopy. Clinical examination by a dermatologist as well as self-assessment by the volunteers disclosed a significant improvement, in terms of the 'global score', on the vitamin C-treated side compared with the control. A highly significant increase in the density of skin microrelief and a decrease of the deep furrows were demonstrated. Ultrastructural evidence of the elastic tissue repair was also obtained and well corroborated the favorable results of the clinical and skin surface examinations. Topical application of 5% vitamin C cream was an effective and well-tolerated treatment. It led to a clinically apparent improvement of the photodamaged skin and induced modifications of skin relief and ultrastructure, suggesting a positive influence of topical vitamin C on parameters characteristic for sun-induced skin ageing.
    Luckily this study gives us a starting point to achieve an optimal way of delivering Vit.C topically:

    --------------------------------

    Vitamin C is known for its antioxidant potential and activity in the collagen biosynthetic pathway. Photoprotective properties of topically applied vitamin C have also been demonstrated, placing this molecule as a potential candidate for use in the prevention and treatment of skin ageing. A topicall …


    Vit. C is available in the market as a variety of creams, serum and transdermal patches. Of these, only the serum contains active Vit. C in an almost colorless form. It is unstable and, on exposure to light, gets oxidized to Dehydro Ascorbic Acid (DHAA), which imparts a yellow color. The stability of Vit. C is controlled by maintaining a pH of less than 3.5. At this pH, the ionic charge on the molecule is removed and it is transported well across the stratum corneum.[3,5,9]

    From a clinical point of view, it is important to note that the efficacy of the Vit. C serum is proportional to the concentration, but only up to 20%.[3] The half-life in the skin after achieving maximum concentration is 4 days. A persistent reservoir of Vit. C is important for adequate photoprotection, and can be achieved by regular 8-hourly applications.[1,5] As UV light lowers tissue Vit. C levels, topical Vit. C is best used after exposure to UV light and not prior.[1–3] A combination of tyrosine, zinc and Vit. C has been shown to increase the bioavailability of Vit. C 20-times vis-à-vis using just Vit. C.[2]

    Note: You probably dont want to just mix these up randomly. I'll find a formulation with the optimal concentrations of each and if this is actually true

    A variety of creams with Vit. C derivatives are available in the market. As a dermatologist, it is important to know that not all preparations are physiologically effective. Some are not delivered into the dermis in an adequate quantity, while others do not chemically convert to the biologically active form of Vit. C in the skin.[1,2,4]

    Note: This is the most crucial part. I'll do more research on this.

    Magnesium ascorbyl phosphate (MAP) is the most stable and preferred ascorbyl ester. This lipophilic molecule is easily absorbed into the skin, and the rate-limiting step for absorption is its release from the vehicle, and not the rate of diffusion across the stratum corneum as one might suppose. MAP has a hydrating effect on the skin and decreases transepidermal water loss. It is also a free radical scavenger that is photoprotective and increases collagen production under laboratory test conditions.[1,3] Other useful stable esterified derivatives are:

    ------------------------------

    MAP might be a better alternative to Vit C seeing as its more stable and readily used by skin cells.

    Also:

    A combination of 0.5% ferulic acid (a potent antioxidant of plant origin) with 15% Vit. C and 1% Vit. E can increase the efficacy of Vit. C eight-fold.[3] It was noted that this triple combination was very useful for the reduction of acute and chronic photodamage, and could be used for prevention of skin cancer in the future.
    Maybe ferulic acid can increase efficiency of MAP?

    This is could be helpful in reducing androgen mediated/ROS induced oxidative damage . I've got more questions than answers so I'll look into this a bit more.

    Originally posted by Chemical
    Why are you guys using neogenic? I've not seen any documentation of how stemoxydine supposedly works. I would much rather people try treatments which have some form of documented mechanism.
    Found a lead:

    Stemoxydine (active ingredient in Neogenic) = diethyl pyridine-2,4-dicarboxylate

    A bit more info on the molecule...

    2,4-Diethylpyridine dicarboxylate
    The pro-angiogenic factor HIF-1α is targeted for destruction in normoxic environments by the hydroxylation of a specific proline residue, P564, by the oxygen-sensing enzyme HIF-α prolyl hydroxylase (HIF-PH).1 2,4-DPD is a cell permeable, competitive inhibitor of HIF-PH. 2,4-DPD inhibits the hydroxylation of P564 by acting as a competitive inhibitor of the HIF-PH cofactor α-keto glutarate, with effective concentrations in the low µM range.2 2,4-DPD is therefore expected to act as a pro-angiogenic compound, via the HIF-1α system.3,4
    A conserved family of prolyl-4-hydroxylases that modify HIF.

    HIFalpha targeted for VHL-mediated destruction by proline hydroxylation: implications for O2 sensing.

    Those studies are the references that describe the pro-HIF-1alpha effects of stemoxydine. HIF-1 stimulates VEGF, and an increase in DPC blood supply actually increases hair diameter and growth rate (check first post for more info). I'm going to do some more reading when I have time, this might be interesting.

    Originally posted by jamesst11
    Chemical, I don't know if you've covered this already, but what are your opinions on Spiro (s-5 cream) applied topically to the balding scalp?
    Topical spiro is a tricky one. There are a handful of people that seen improvements and others that claim it goes systemic (leading to gyno). Theoretically, inhibition of systemic AR results in the HPTA pumping out more testosterone to satisfy negative feedback loop, so you shouldnt experience serious gyno. There is only one study that tested spiro for systemic absorption and they only measured hormone levels over 72hrs, which wouldnt be greatly affected anyway since its an AR blocker. They also saw no increase in the metabolite which is sketchy imo. Plus it was a while ago. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/3411088

    This hamster study: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/7608379
    shows that topical spiro blunted exogenous testosterone induced sebaceous gland growth, which means its doing something.

    Its also been used to treat female pattern hairloss with vary degrees of success, but female scalp is not exactly the same as male scalp physiologically (gender dependant receptor and protein expression variability). Then theres the side effects - although typical low doses shouldnt be a problem if it indeed doesnt go systemic.

    I wanted to try spiro and thought it would be an ideal candidate to block AR. Flutamide has better physiological responses but its got considerable hepatotoxicity risks. Bicalutamide seems like a better canditate since its got a ridiuculous half life, but theres still not enough information on topical administration and systemic effects, I suspect it'll most probably go systemic using standard skin penetration vehicles. Personally? I wouldnt advocate spiro with insufficient evidence on its efficacy.

    Comment

    • scooterboy
      Junior Member
      • Dec 2015
      • 13

      #62
      What do you think of DMSO instead of emu ? It works great for penetrating in to the scalp .

      Comment

      • Seuxin
        Senior Member
        • Jan 2014
        • 223

        #63
        And p53 is decreased by hypoxia...and Stemoxydine induce hypoxia.

        Comment

        • TheKingofFighters
          Member
          • Dec 2015
          • 87

          #64
          using ascorbic acid and its derivatives on the balding scalp are gonna further upregulate already-upregulated immunity genes there.

          Comment

          • solaeg
            Junior Member
            • Dec 2015
            • 3

            #65
            I am currently using oleuropein since it seems to have great potential when using it topically, but also internally in terms of body-recomposition and various health related effects (e.g. http://suppversity.blogspot.dk/2012/...tosterone.html and http://www.ergo-log.com/oleuropein-b...anabolism.html)

            This thread is great for trying to understand the effects using it topically .
            As I understand, some of it's fat loss effects comes from being an PPAR Gamma antagonist. Meanwhile, PPAR Gamma agonists stimulates adipogenesis. And a thickening fat layer in the scalp is good for hair (http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3992657/ - "In each case, the thickness of the fat layer was decreased by 50% in the regions of hair loss"), while it is otherwise replaced by fibrotic tissue (collagen).
            If I understand it correctly, activation of PPAR Gamma also has anti-fibrotic effects (maybe due to regulating adipogenesis?): http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3733781/

            Considering the above, are there any issues when using Oleuropein topically and/or internally?

            And what is the role of oleuropein and adipogenesis in the scalp?
            "Wnt/β-catenin signaling stimulates adipocyte differentiation in vivo and in vitro": http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3992657/
            On the other hand, Wnt6, Wnt10a and Wnt10b seem to do the opposite:
            Wnt10b is an established regulator of mesenchymal stem cell (MSC) fate that inhibits adipogenesis and stimulates osteoblastogenesis, thereby impacting bone mass in vivo. However, downstream mechanisms through which Wnt10b exerts these effects are poorly understood. Moreover, whether other endogenous …

            And I guess we don't want osteoblast in the scalp?

            Is oleuropein activating wnt10b which upregulates wnt/β-catenin signaling which positively regulates adipogenesis in the scalp? Or is it likely to not have an effect on adipogenesis?

            Comment

            • TheKingofFighters
              Member
              • Dec 2015
              • 87

              #66
              oleuropein inhibits COX2

              All tested polyphenols reduced endothelial cell tube formation on matrigel and migration in wound healing assays. The reduced angiogenesis was associated with the inhibition of PMA-induced COX-2 protein expression and prostanoid production, as well as MMP-9 protein release and gelatinolytic activity. These effects were accompanied by a significant reduction in the stimulated intracellular reactive oxygen species levels and in the activation of the redox-sensitive transcription factor nuclear factor (NF)-κB. Our findings reveal that olive oil and red wine polyphenols reduce inflammatory angiogenesis in cultured endothelial cells, through MMP-9 and COX-2 inhibition, supporting a potential protective role for dietary polyphenols in atherosclerotic vascular disease and cancer.

              Diets with high content of antioxidant polyphenols are associated with low prevalence of cardiovascular diseases and cancer. Inflammatory angiogenesis is a key pathogenic process both in cancer and atherosclerosis, and is tightly regulated by the proinflammatory enzyme cyclooxygenase (COX)-2 and the …




              Khalatbary et al. demonstrated that oleuropein treatment significantly attenuates the expression of TNF-α and IL-1β, and, consequently, the expression of iNOS and COX-2 [43].

              Comment

              • Seuxin
                Senior Member
                • Jan 2014
                • 223

                #67
                If Oleuropein inhibe cox-2 , we just need another coumpound in order to increase PEG2 !

                Comment

                • TheKingofFighters
                  Member
                  • Dec 2015
                  • 87

                  #68
                  btw, i do agree that vit c is good on areas u want fair, smooth, hairless and collagen-filled

                  Comment

                  • UNBEAT
                    Member
                    • Dec 2015
                    • 34

                    #69
                    Hey chemical, thanks for what you are doing.. i wanted to know if oleuropein can help with seborreah severe hair loss .i have lost 50% of my hair because of it. thank you

                    Comment

                    • Chemical
                      Member
                      • May 2014
                      • 75

                      #70
                      Originally posted by scooterboy
                      What do you think of DMSO instead of emu ? It works great for penetrating in to the scalp .
                      Some people have noticed that when using DMSO as a vehicle they had increased shedding. I think I saw some posts on btt and ***. Avoid DMSO and go with a different vehicle.

                      Originally posted by Seuxin
                      And p53 is decreased by hypoxia...and Stemoxydine induce hypoxia.
                      Apparently so! http://www.nature.com/cddis/journal/...is201148a.html

                      But hypoxia has also been frequently found to elevate p53 levels as elucidated in the study. So not that straightforward it seems.

                      Originally posted by TheKingofFighters
                      using ascorbic acid and its derivatives on the balding scalp are gonna further upregulate already-upregulated immunity genes there.
                      This is true that ascorbic acid derivatives will increase immunity markers but AGA is not an autoimmune condition. The saying: "correlation does not equal causuality" applies here. Just because immunity genes are elevated in balding scap (I've seen studies talk about this) does not mean those genes cause baldness. It could be a reaction to either one of many pathways, tumor suppressors, ros, dna damage, anything.

                      Originally posted by TheKingofFighters
                      btw, i do agree that vit c is good on areas u want fair, smooth, hairless and collagen-filled
                      Its not Vit.c specifically that we're after, we need a good ROS scavenger, since the studies I posted in my first page show that ROS scavengers like ascorbate completely reverse the effects of DHT mediated hair growth inhibition. Your statement implies vitamin C does not help with hair growth/or causes hair to stop growing, which I disagree with for the aformentioned reasons.

                      Originally posted by TheKingofFighters
                      oleuropein inhibits COX2
                      These effects were accompanied by a significant reduction in the stimulated intracellular reactive oxygen species levels and in the activation of the redox-sensitive transcription factor nuclear factor (NF)-κB. Our findings reveal that olive oil and red wine polyphenols reduce inflammatory angiogenesis in cultured endothelial cells, through MMP-9 and COX-2 inhibition, supporting a potential protective role for dietary polyphenols in atherosclerotic vascular disease and cancer.

                      Diets with high content of antioxidant polyphenols are associated with low prevalence of cardiovascular diseases and cancer. Inflammatory angiogenesis is a key pathogenic process both in cancer and atherosclerosis, and is tightly regulated by the proinflammatory enzyme cyclooxygenase (COX)-2 and the …


                      Khalatbary et al. demonstrated that oleuropein treatment significantly attenuates the expression of TNF-α and IL-1β, and, consequently, the expression of iNOS and COX-2 [43].
                      http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4227229/
                      A reduction in COX-2 does mean there will be less arachidonic acid for PGHS to convert to PGE2, and also PGD2. A decrease in PGE2 does not necessarily mean hair will affected detrimentally, this may be the case in people who do not use exogenous hair growth agents. We are manually controlling the protein/receptor expression for a net increase in hair growth, so although there might factors trying to inhibit hair growth, the pro growth factors will win the tug of war. I'd like to people to get out of this black and white mindset, this is a complex model and the body is designed to have alternate pathways in case one fails. This is both a good thing and a bad thing because it means we have to take everything into account when targeting certain paths.

                      Originally posted by Seuxin
                      If Oleuropein inhibe cox-2 , we just need another coumpound in order to increase PEG2 !
                      Minoxidil is your answer. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/9008235
                      Although there probably wont be much arachidonic acid if COX-2 is significantly inhibited by oleuropein. DHT is a known stimulator of COX-2 via IL-1B, so thers still a chance oleuropein only cancel this to normal levels.

                      Originally posted by solaeg
                      I am currently using oleuropein since it seems to have great potential when using it topically, but also internally in terms of body-recomposition and various health related effects (e.g. http://suppversity.blogspot.dk/2012/...tosterone.html and http://www.ergo-log.com/oleuropein-b...anabolism.html)

                      This thread is great for trying to understand the effects using it topically .
                      As I understand, some of it's fat loss effects comes from being an PPAR Gamma antagonist. Meanwhile, PPAR Gamma agonists stimulates adipogenesis. And a thickening fat layer in the scalp is good for hair (http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3992657/ - "In each case, the thickness of the fat layer was decreased by 50% in the regions of hair loss"), while it is otherwise replaced by fibrotic tissue (collagen).
                      If I understand it correctly, activation of PPAR Gamma also has anti-fibrotic effects (maybe due to regulating adipogenesis?): http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3733781/

                      Considering the above, are there any issues when using Oleuropein topically and/or internally?

                      And what is the role of oleuropein and adipogenesis in the scalp?

                      "Wnt/β-catenin signaling stimulates adipocyte differentiation in vivo and in vitro":


                      On the other hand, Wnt6, Wnt10a and Wnt10b seem to do the opposite:
                      Wnt10b is an established regulator of mesenchymal stem cell (MSC) fate that inhibits adipogenesis and stimulates osteoblastogenesis, thereby impacting bone mass in vivo. However, downstream mechanisms through which Wnt10b exerts these effects are poorly understood. Moreover, whether other endogenous …

                      And I guess we don't want osteoblast in the scalp?

                      Is oleuropein activating wnt10b which upregulates wnt/β-catenin signaling which positively regulates adipogenesis in the scalp? Or is it likely to not have an effect on adipogenesis?
                      Really thought provoking questions!

                      The Japanese study from ergo log shows a strange result:

                      The content of uncoupling protein 1 (UCP1) in IBAT and urinary noradrenaline and adrenaline excretions were significantly higher in rats fed the 0.1 or 0.2% oleuropein diet, as compared with those of rats fed with the control diet, although there were no significant differences in rats fed the 0.4% oleuropein diet
                      (Nor/adrenaline increases T via α1-adrenergic receptor mediated LH increase)

                      Oleuropein has a biphasic effect!? So it is true.

                      WNT10b inhibits adipogenesis via a mechanism I dont fully understand, along with WNT6 and 10a like you pointed out. You wont have progenitor cells differentiate into osteoblasts in the skin so thats nothing to worry about, but WNT10b will promote the keratinocyte lineage.

                      Oleuropein is a known inhibitor of PPARγ, and adipocytes differentiate/mature via PPARγ

                      The question now is like you've pointed out, what happens if the fat layer in scalp reduced? Does the fat layer cause hair regrowth? These studes are excellent and help us understand the underlying mechanics.

                      Epidermal Wnt/β-catenin signaling regulates adipocyte differentiation via secretion of adipogenic factors

                      Unraveling hair follicle-adipocyte communication

                      The adipocyte precursors actually promotes anagen development via PDGF (not to be confused with PGD2)

                      In addition to the requirement of adipocytes in the skin for anagen induction, adipocyte lineage cells are sufficient to induce the hair follicle cycle. Transplantation of adipocyte progenitor cells intradermally into the backskin of shaved mice at the extended 3–4 week telogen stage of the hair follicle cycle that occurs around 7 weeks of age resulted in adipocyte graft formation and corresponding precocious hair growth. Anagen was induced in these mice injected with the enriched adipocyte progenitor cells from WT or AZIP, but not with cells of the entire stromal vascular fraction (SVF), supporting that the hair-inducing activity was specific for immature adipocyte lineage cells [7].

                      The mechanism behind this interaction is not completely understood, but PDGF signaling may play a role [7]. PDGFA mRNA is significantly elevated in adipocyte precursor cells, and mice lacking PDGFA show a delay in hair follicle stem cell activation that mirrors the phenotype of Ebf1−/− mice [27,28].

                      Based on the expression of PDGF ligands by adipocyte lineage cells, the activation of the PDGFR in the DP during anagen, and the ability of PDGF-coated beads to rescue hair cycling defects in Ebf1 null mice, we propose that adipocyte precursor cells secrete PDGF to promote hair growth. Mice lacking PDGF-A display similar hair follicle defects as Ebf1 null mice, namely a lack of anagen entry
                      Only the precursor adipocytes produce PDGF, not the mature differentiated hypertrophic cells.

                      How does PDGF do this? look at this:

                      Involvement of platelet-derived growth factor receptor-alpha in hair canal formation.

                      Hair follicles develop and are maintained by multiple rounds of inductive events involving interactions among various cell types within the follicles and the adjacent mesenchyme. In this study, we established the antagonistic monoclonal antibody APA5 against platelet-derived growth factor (PDGF) receptor-alpha (PDGFR-alpha) and used it to investigate the role of PDGFR-alpha in neonatal skin development. In addition to the dermal mesenchyme, a known site of PDGFR-alpha expression, immunohistologic staining of neonatal skin detected transient expression of PDGFR-alpha in the perinatal epidermis for several days. On the other hand, ligands for PDGFR-alpha were detected in epithelial cells and sebaceous glands of hair follicles. To determine whether this contiguous expression of PDGF and PDGFR-alpha in neonatal skin plays a functional role, we injected APA5 into neonates to block the function of PDGFR-alpha. Consistent with the PDGF/PDGFR-alpha expression in the neonatal skin, two defects were induced by this procedure. First, hair canal formation in the epidermis was severely suppressed. Second, the growth of dermal connective tissues and of hair follicles of pelage hairs was suppressed. These results indicate that PDGF signals are involved in both the epidermis-follicle interaction and the dermal mesenchyme-follicle interaction required for hair canal formation and the growth of the dermal mesenchyme, respectively.
                      So the adipocyte precursors (mesenchymal stem cells?) actually signal to the hair follicle canal to prepare for the new anagen cycle. This is the kick that telogen hairs need to actually form the follicle canal before the DPC can start proliferating.

                      Effect of IGF-I on Hair Growth Is Related to the Anti-Apoptotic Effect of IGF-I and Up-Regulation of PDGF-A and PDGF-B

                      Oleuropein upregulated IGF-1 significantly, so the DPC should be more receptive to PDGF signals.

                      This is incredible stuff! Okay, so what controls adipogenesis fate?

                      The growth of the intradermal adipose depot could occur through adipocyte hypertrophy or adipogenesis. While adipocyte hypertrophy involves lipogenesis, adipogenesis requires the proliferation and specification of adipocyte precursor cells into preadipocytes, which exit from the cell cycle and differentiate into mature, lipid-laden adipocytes (Rodeheffer et al., 2008; Rosen and Spiegelman, 2000). Adipogenesis requires the upregulation and transcriptional activity of the nuclear receptor, PPARγ in preadipoctyes
                      Perhaps this could explain the sudden increase in dozen or so new follicles when I stopped the oleuropein? This could mean that you need to cycle the oleuropein, using 2-4 weeks on then 2 weeks off. Then again, immature adipocytes only help with anagen induction and do not play a huge part in maintenance (Beta Cetenin does that). Mature adipocytes actually secrete factors that inhibit hair growth. This inhibition is probably weak since females hair ridiculously long anagen cycles even though they have a normal scalp fat layer. The adipocytes also have estrogen receptors which could explain their hypertrophy during anagen:

                      Mature adipocytes also express signaling molecules that can modulate hair cycling. Intradermal adipocytes express BMP2 maximally in late anagen and early telogen, causing follicles to be refractory to activation cues [30]. Given that BMP signaling blocks anagen induction [33–36], these data suggest that adipocyte derived BMPs may promote and maintain follicular stem cell quiescence. Thus, when BMP signals are reduced in the macroenvironment, the hair follicles are open to activation signals, enter into a competent telogen phase and the follicles can re-enter anagen. The contribution of adipocyte derived BMP proteins is unknown since the dermal papillae also express BMP mRNAs [37].
                      Delving deeper:

                      Analysis of BrdU incorporation within adipocyte precursor cells revealed that prior to anagen ~50% of adipocyte precursor cells are proliferating. However, once anagen was initiated, the percentage of proliferative adipogenic cells was reduced to ~25% (Figure 2C). Thus, adipocyte precursor cells are stimulated to proliferate during late catagen to generate an increased population of adipogenic cells during anagen induction. These data correlate with the timing of de novo adipocyte generation after anagen induction (Figure 1C).

                      Thus, these three mouse models with diminished or absent intradermal adipocytes affect different stages of adipogenesis in the skin. The Ebf1 null mouse lacks adipocyte precursor cells suggesting that this mutation acts at the adipocyte precursor cell to block postnatal intradermal adipogenesis. PPARγ antagonists do not block the formation of adipocyte precursor cells in the skin but disrupt the formation of PPARγ+, preadipocytes, resulting in a loss of postnatal intradermal adipogenesis.

                      This is already becoming complex. I suspect whats happening here is that once hairs enter anagen they start secreting factors that reduce PPARy signalling, hence the reduction in adipocyte precursors. WNT10b, 10a, and WNT6 could be elevated in anagen hairs, and when the catagen phase kicks in, the adipocyte precursors are free to proliferate, then once the hair follicle is recreated the precurors have done their job. The increase in the fat layer is caused by the growing hair follicles:

                      During activation of hair growth, the expansion of the intradermal adipocyte layer in the skin doubles the skin’s thickness (Butcher, 1934; Chase et al., 1953; Hansen et al., 1984).
                      This means the balding skin is primed for growth, and just needs that kick. The follicles need to be stimulated with WNT/BetaCatenin to start the adipocyte precursor proliferation and then once the hair canal is formed, you need sustained BetaCatenin to maintain hair follicle which is a hard job because theres multiple pathways working against you.

                      I think I'll cycle the Oleuropein 4 weeks on, 2 weeks off. I'm also going to look into ROS scavengers to prevent the rise in DKK1 when not using oleuropein.

                      Comment

                      • Seuxin
                        Senior Member
                        • Jan 2014
                        • 223

                        #71
                        In order to increase PGE2, you shoud look at Vitamine E Succinate studies
                        By the way, i use adenosine since 7 month with really no results

                        Comment

                        • Seuxin
                          Senior Member
                          • Jan 2014
                          • 223

                          #72
                          Hello,

                          I have difficutlies to find a good oleuropein supplement to buy which can be shipped to France...
                          Better is to buy as liquide, ethanol based right ?

                          Any link for Europe please ?

                          Thanks a lot

                          Comment

                          • TheKingofFighters
                            Member
                            • Dec 2015
                            • 87

                            #73
                            Ascorbic acid =

                            COX2 inhibitor
                            Prolactin activator
                            Hypoxia inhibitor
                            CD34 inhibitor

                            upregulates these genes that are already overexpressed in balding scalp:

                            1) ifi27: Promotes cell death. Mediates IFN-induced apoptosis characterized by a rapid and robust release of cytochrome C from the mitochondria and activation of BAX and caspases 2, 3, 6, 8 and 9. http://www.genecards.org/cgi-bin/carddisp.pl?gene=IFI27
                            2) IGF-1(not an immune marker- but it is already overupregulated in balding scalp)
                            3)c-FOS apoptotic gene
                            4)CTSK(this gene breaks down bones- and hair):
                            Closely involved in osteoclastic bone resorption and may participate partially in the disorder of bone remodeling. Displays potent endoprotease activity against fibrinogen at acid pH. May play an important role in extracellular matrix degradation
                            Tocris Summary for CTSK Gene



                            5)CXCL9:
                            Cytokine that affects the growth, movement, or activation state of cells that participate in immune and inflammatory response. Chemotactic for activated T-cells. Binds to CXCR3

                            6)C3:
                            C3 plays a central role in the activation of the complement system. Its processing by C3 convertase is the central reaction in both classical and alternative complement pathways. After activation C3b can bind covalently, via its reactive thioester, to cell surface carbohydrates or immune aggregates
                            Derived from proteolytic degradation of complement C3, C3a anaphylatoxin is a mediator of local inflammatory process. In chronic inflammation, acts as a chemoattractant for neutrophils (By similarity). It induces the contraction of smooth muscle, increases vascular permeability and causes histamine release from mast cells and basophilic leukocytes.
                            C3-beta-c: Acts as a chemoattractant for neutrophils in chronic inflammation.
                            Acylation stimulating protein: adipogenic hormone that stimulates triglyceride (TG) synthesis and glucose transport in adipocytes, regulating fat storage and playing a role in postprandial TG clearance. Appears to stimulate TG synthesis via activation of the PLC, MAPK and AKT signaling pathways. Ligand for C5AR2. Promotes the phosphorylation, ARRB2-mediated internalization and recycling of C5AR2 (PubMed:8376604, PubMed:2909530, PubMed:9059512, PubMed:10432298, PubMed:15833747, PubMed:16333141, PubMed:19615750).

                            Sorry but If u're claiming that these immunity genes are not the 1s causing balding- then what is? MpB is not an atuimmune condition? do u have any idea what does CRTh2 stands for?

                            A reduction in COX-2 does mean there will be less arachidonic acid for PGHS to convert to PGE2, and also PGD2. A decrease in PGE2 does not necessarily mean hair will affected detrimentally, this may be the case in people who do not use exogenous hair growth agents. We are manually controlling the protein/receptor expression for a net increase in hair growth, so although there might factors trying to inhibit hair growth, the pro growth factors will win the tug of war. I'd like to people to get out of this black and white mindset, this is a complex model and the body is designed to have alternate pathways in case one fails. This is both a good thing and a bad thing because it means we have to take everything into account when targeting certain paths.

                            We are 'manually' controlling which protein and receptor? a net increase in hair growth by what mechanism? what are the factors that you are talking about? What's the altenative pathway? I can only see a long detour here

                            Comment

                            • woodnor
                              Member
                              • Feb 2014
                              • 44

                              #74
                              Hey Chemical I think that what youre doing is great and its nice that you try to answer every question thoroughly
                              Now I have a question, though im not sure if it is too stupid but here it goes... i always though there was no point in taking things that stimulate growth like minox or now Oleuropein if you dont take something that halts or slows down the balding process. The explanation that I had read for this was that it didnt matter if your hair was thicker (because of minox/Oleuropein) because the follicles were gonna die anyway, as you werent attacking the root of the problem (and supposedly finasteride would attack the 'root' as it lowers dht).

                              Maybe i got everything wrong, but it would be great if you could explain this to me, as i dont really understrand why would you take something like Oleuropein (which from what i understand only stimulates growth) without taking something that would stop or slow the death of the follicle? Does this question make sense? Its like why would you want to make your hair thicker if its going to fall off anyway.
                              Thanks for your time i really appreciate what youre doing

                              Comment

                              • paleocapa89
                                Member
                                • Sep 2015
                                • 48

                                #75
                                Hey Chemical, I was wondering, can oleuropein penetrate the skin without problem, given that it is a fairly large molecule?

                                Comment

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