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  • Evaluating Molecular Proper...
    Chen, Chen-Peng; Chen, Chan-Cheng; Huang, Chia-Wen; Chang, Yen-Ching

    Molecules (Basel, Switzerland), 04/2018, Volume: 23, Issue: 4
    Journal Article

    The skin permeability ( ) defines the rate of a chemical penetrating across the stratum corneum. This value is widely used to quantitatively describe the transport of molecules in the outermost layer of epidermal skin and indicate the significance of skin absorption. This study defined a quantitative structure-activity relationship (QSAR) based on 106 chemical substances of measured using human skin and interpreted the molecular interactions underlying transport behavior of small molecules in the stratum corneum. The QSAR developed in this study identified four molecular descriptors that described the molecular cyclicity in the molecule reflecting local geometrical environments, topological distances between pairs of oxygen and chlorine atoms, lipophilicity, and similarity to antineoplastics in molecular properties. This QSAR considered the octanol-water partition coefficient to be a direct influence on transdermal movement of molecules. Moreover, the QSAR identified a sub-domain of molecular properties initially defined to describe the antineoplastic resemblance of a compound as a significant factor in affecting transdermal permeation of solutes. This finding suggests that the influence of molecular size on the chemical's skin-permeating capability should be interpreted with other relevant physicochemical properties rather than being represented by molecular weight alone.