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Skin longevity: supporting skin biology from the inside out and outside in through life sciences and microbiome research.

  • Biology-led care

  • Skin as a messenger

  • Why biology breaks

  • The Microbiome

  • Microbiome–skin interactions

  • Microbiome and health

  • AWvi strategy

The future of skin health and care does not lie in doing more to the skin, but in understanding more about the individual. It belongs to professionals and approaches that prioritise physiology, systemic balance, and long-term outcomes beyond isolated correction, symptom management or surface intervention.

       

1.1. The rise of regenerative thinking

 

A key evolution in the field is the shift from cosmetic and aesthetic replacement to biological regeneration.

 

The focus is moving away from covering signs of dysfunction and towards reactivating the body’s own mechanisms that support tissue quality, cellular repair, and structural integrity.

Today’s individuals are more informed, more curious, and more engaged with their care. They are asking how their skin functions, what influences visible change over time, and how they can work with their biology also in a preventive, sustainable way.

 

This is not about reversing time, but about preserving vitality, improving skin’s performance, and maintaining coherence between internal function and external expression.

 

This is what defines a modern approach to skin longevity:
not only the cosmetic correction of superficial signs, but also the support of biological systems that sustain healthy, adaptable, and resilient skin.

 

1.2. Linking care to biology

 

Understanding the biological context

Skin behaviour is increasingly understood through biological signals, lifestyle patterns, and broader indicators of health. These insights help anticipate how the skin may respond over time, adapt routines more precisely, and improve comfort and tolerance. 

 

This includes looking at everyday factors such as sleep quality, nutrition, physical activity, and emotional stress, as well as environmental exposures like pollution, light stress, and temperature changes. Each of these elements has a measurable impact on inflammation, oxidative stress, and the integrity of the skin barrier.

 

When the internal and external influences on skin biology are understood, skin care shifts from reactive surface correction to more informed, biology-led support. This enables coherent, long-term approaches that work with the skin’s own systems.

 

Designing care around physiology

This perspective is changing how skin care routines are conceived and maintained. Rather than relying on isolated products or short-term fixes, there is growing emphasis on structured, long-term strategies that take into account skin structure, natural rhythms, stress exposure, recovery capacity, and individual variation over time.

This represents a clear evolution: from isolated corrections to ongoing care, and from surface appearance alone to supporting internal balance and function.

 

Aligning care with biological rhythms

Combined approaches play a key role in this model. When topical formulations, bioactive ingredients, recovery-supporting practices, and lifestyle inputs are selected and coordinated according to individual skin biology, results are more consistent, better tolerated, and more durable.

 

The skin is no longer viewed as a collection of separate concerns, but as part of an interconnected biological system governed by underlying physiological processes.

Beyond a canvas to refine, correct, or perfect, skin is first and foremost a biological interface.

 

It communicates, adapts, and reflects the condition of deeper physiological systems: digestive, immune, neuroendocrine, metabolic, and cellular.
It is not only the body’s most exposed organ, but also its most responsive, constantly influenced by the gut, the immune system, the nervous system, and the pressures of modern life. Understanding these relationships is essential to supporting skin function in a way that is aligned with its biology.

 

Its function, resilience, and appearance are shaped continuously by internal dynamics, including hormonal signalling, inflammatory tone, gut microbiota, psychological stress, and oxidative balance. Increasingly, the skin is recognised not as an isolated tissue but as an expressive surface of systemic biology.

 

This represents a fundamental shift in perspective and defines AWvi’s approach as a model of skin health rooted in biological collaboration rather than cosmetic correction. It is an approach that moves beyond symptom management and works instead with the systems that govern resilience, repair, and regeneration.

 

From medically defined inflammatory skin diseases to functionally compromised or aesthetic concerns, AWvi’s systems-based approach is designed to support the skin through all phases of dysregulation, including:
 

→ Chronic inflammatory conditions such as acne, rosacea, eczema, psoriasis, and seborrhoeic dermatitis
→ Pigmentary disorders including melasma, sun-induced discolouration, and post-inflammatory hyperpigmentation
→ Functional concerns like redness, dehydration, textural irregularity, dullness, or the structural shifts associated with ageing

 

Each concern may appear distinct. However, the biological pathways beneath them, including barrier integrity, immune regulation, microbiome resilience, mitochondrial energy, and systemic balance, are closely interlinked.

We live in a world our biology was never designed for.

 

Human physiology has evolved over millennia to thrive in conditions marked by cyclical light, physical movement, diverse microbiota, nutrient-rich food, and parasympathetic balance.

 

But in just a few decades, this environment has been radically altered.
Sleep deprivation, emotional stress, sedentary behaviour, nutrient-poor diets, environmental pollution, and reduced microbial exposure now define the baseline of modern life.
These inputs outpace the adaptability of our physiology, and the result is systemic overload, a chronic, low-grade biological stress that disrupts immunity, metabolism, repair, and regeneration.

 

This is the terrain on which skin conditions develop or worsen.

Acne, rosacea, eczema, dermatitis, psoriasis, perioral dermatitis, seborrhoeic dermatitis, melasma, sensitive skin, dehydrated skin, ageing skin, oily skin, and combination skin—each is a clinical expression of dysfunction in one or more of the following pathways:
 

→ Microbiome diversity and resilience
→ Immune regulation
→ Inflammatory resolution
→ Barrier integrity
→ Cellular energy production (ATP)
→ Hormonal and neuroendocrine balance

 

These mechanisms are not condition-specific. They underlie most skin pathologies. Addressing them shifts care from reactivity to resilience, moving the focus away from symptom management and toward systemic restoration.

 

Among these, mitochondrial function deserves closer attention. As the primary source of cellular energy, mitochondria fuel the biosynthesis of structural proteins, support keratinocyte and fibroblast renewal, and regulate the resolution of inflammation. In skin, they underpin processes as diverse as collagen production, wound healing, and barrier regeneration.

 

Yet mitochondrial efficiency is highly sensitive to biological stress. With advancing age—or under the cumulative pressure of pollution, chronic inflammation, nutrient deficiency, and psychological stress—mitochondrial output declines. ATP production slows, cellular turnover lags, and the skin's regenerative pace falters.

 

This energy deficit may remain invisible in the early stages, but it progressively manifests as dullness, textural irregularity, delayed repair, and the loss of structural integrity commonly associated with both intrinsic and extrinsic ageing.

The microbiome is where inflammation, immunity, and skin health intersect.

The microbiome is no longer peripheral. It is now recognised as a regulatory organ, a critical interface between the skin and its environment, and between the gut and systemic immunity.

       

4.1. Skin Microbiome

 

The skin hosts a vast and heterogeneous microbial community, with distinct ecosystems inhabiting dry, oily, and moist regions of the body.
These site-specific microbiomes play an essential role in maintaining epidermal barrier integrity, regulating immune tolerance, and limiting colonisation by pathogenic species.

In a state of balance, they support both cutaneous and systemic homeostasis.
 

However, when dysbiosis develops, whether as a result of environmental pollution, nutritional imbalance, antibiotic exposure, or chronic psychological stress, this equilibrium is disrupted. Opportunistic microbial strains can then proliferate, reducing diversity and altering immune signalling.

 

A growing body of evidence links this imbalance to the development and persistence of inflammatory skin conditions such as acne vulgaris, rosacea, atopic dermatitis, psoriasis, and hidradenitis suppurativa. Dysbiosis is also implicated in the acceleration of skin ageing, by weakening barrier defences, increasing transepidermal water loss, sustaining low-grade inflammation, and impairing the skin’s capacity for repair.
 

Even in the absence of overt disease, microbiome disruption contributes to functional skin disturbances such as heightened sensitivity, delayed healing, and reduced tolerance to interventions, underscoring its foundational role in both resilience and skin longevity.

 

Additional peer-reviewed sources:

Boxberger M, Cenizo V, Cassir N, La Scola B. (2021). Challenges in exploring and manipulating the human skin microbiome.
https://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40168-021-01062-5

Lee HJ, Kim M. (2022). Skin Barrier Function and the Microbiome.
https://www.mdpi.com/1422-0067/23/21/13071

 

4.2. Gut-Skin Axis

 

The gut microbiota influence far more than digestion. This diverse and metabolically active ecosystem plays a central role in:
 

→ regulating systemic inflammation,
→ supporting epithelial barrier repair,
→ modulating hormone metabolism, and
→ maintaining oxidative balance.

 

Through immune, neuroendocrine, and metabolic pathways, the gut communicates continuously with the skin. This interaction, known as the gut–skin axis, is now considered a key determinant of both skin health and disease.

 

Several mechanisms explain this connection.
When microbial diversity is intact and supported by adequate prebiotic intake, fermentation of dietary fibres generates short-chain fatty acids such as butyrate. These molecules help to lower systemic inflammation, improve intestinal barrier integrity, and modulate immune activity at distant epithelial sites, including the skin.

 

In addition, a healthy gut microbiota contributes to skin barrier maintenance by enhancing ceramide synthesis and improving the expression of tight junction proteins. These effects strengthen both intestinal and cutaneous barriers, making the skin more resilient to environmental and immunological stress.
 

The gut microbiota also shape cytokine profiles systemically, helping to regulate the balance between pro- and anti-inflammatory signals that influence chronic inflammatory load and ageing.

 

Additional peer-reviewed sources:

De Pessemier B, Grine L, Debaere M, Maes A, Paetzold B, Callewaert C. (2021).
Gut–Skin Axis: Current Knowledge of the Interrelationship between Microbial Dysbiosis and Skin Conditions.
https://www.mdpi.com/2076-2607/9/2/353

Salem I, Ramser A, Isham N, Ghannoum MA. (2018).
The Gut Microbiome as a Major Regulator of the Gut-Skin Axis.
https://www.frontiersin.org/journals/microbiology/articles/10.3389/fmicb.2018.01459/full

Beyond its role in inflammation and disease, the microbiome directly influences a wide array of core skin functions, many of which are central to both dermatological health and aesthetic outcomes.

 

These include barrier integrity, hydration, pigmentation, immune tolerance, and cellular renewal.

This extends its relevance well beyond overt pathology, positioning microbial balance as a prerequisite for functional and regenerative skin care.

 

1. Barrier repair and lipid regulation

 

A healthy skin microbiome plays an active role in the production and modulation of ceramides, free fatty acids, and other epidermal lipids, which are essential for barrier structure, cohesion, and fluidity. Certain commensal bacteria also contribute to sebum metabolism and pH regulation, helping to maintain an environment that is unfavourable to opportunistic species while supporting optimal enzymatic activity within the stratum corneum.

 

This mildly acidic surface environment, often referred to as the acid mantle, supports commensal microbial communities, enables efficient ceramide processing, and preserves the activity of barrier-related enzymes involved in desquamation and lipid organisation, within a physiological pH range of approximately 4.5 to 5.5.

 

When this equilibrium is disrupted, whether through dysbiosis, environmental stress, or repeated exposure to alkaline or aggressive topical interventions, these regulatory mechanisms begin to fail. Lipid synthesis becomes less efficient, microbial balance shifts, and enzymatic activity is impaired. The result is a weakened barrier characterised by increased transepidermal water loss, heightened sensitivity, dryness, and a greater propensity toward inflammatory reactivity.

 

Preserving physiological pH is therefore not a cosmetic consideration, but a biological prerequisite for microbiome stability, barrier integrity, and the maintenance of normal stratum corneum function.

 

2. Immune tolerance and inflammatory setpoint

 

The skin’s immune system is highly influenced by microbial cues.
Resident microbes modulate TLR signalling, cytokine expression, and antigen presentation in keratinocytes and dendritic cells. In balance, this promotes immune tolerance and prevents inappropriate inflammatory responses.

 

In dysbiosis, this regulation collapses. There is a shift toward a pro-inflammatory cytokine milieu, increased mast cell activity, and impaired regulation of T regulatory cells.

This immune imbalance is a feature not only of chronic conditions like atopic dermatitis or psoriasis, but also of sensitive or redness-prone skin, where low-grade inflammation persists despite the absence of clinical disease.

 

3. Hydration and Hyaluronic Acid expression

 

Emerging evidence shows that microbial metabolites influence keratinocyte gene expression, including those involved in the synthesis of endogenous hyaluronic acid and aquaporin water channels. These pathways are fundamental to maintaining optimal epidermal hydration, elasticity, and resilience.

 

When microbial signals are disrupted, due to stress, pollution, or over-cleansing, these pathways are downregulated, leading to dullness, dehydration, and increased susceptibility to environmental stress.

 

4. Dermal structure and extracellular matrix integrity

 

Structural proteins such as collagen, elastin, and fibronectin form the scaffolding of the dermis, supporting the skin’s firmness, elasticity, and mechanical resilience. Their synthesis depends on fibroblast activity, adequate nutrient availability, and mitochondrial energy production, while their degradation is primarily driven by matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs) activated under oxidative or inflammatory stress.
 

In healthy skin, a dynamic balance between synthesis and breakdown preserves tissue architecture and enables efficient regeneration. But under chronic inflammation, oxidative damage, or mitochondrial dysfunction, this balance becomes dysregulated, leading to structural decline, impaired wound healing, and the visible features of ageing.
 

Emerging evidence indicates that microbial metabolites, including short-chain fatty acids and antioxidant peptides, may play an indirect but critical role in maintaining matrix homeostasis. By modulating systemic inflammation, supporting mitochondrial function, and helping to regulate the skin’s oxidative environment, the microbiome contributes to the preservation of dermal structure—reinforcing its role not only in immune defence and barrier support, but in the skin’s long-term mechanical integrity.

 

5. Neurogenic inflammation and sensory dysregulation

 

The microbiome also intersects with the cutaneous nervous system, influencing the release of neuropeptides (such as substance P and CGRP) and modulating nociceptor sensitivity.

This is now understood as part of the microbiota–skin–brain axis, where microbial diversity helps buffer the skin’s response to emotional and environmental stress.

 

When dysbiosis occurs, this neuroimmune balance is lost. The result is heightened sensory perception, itch, burning, flushing, and the features commonly observed in rosacea, sensitive skin, and stress-induced flare-ups.

 

6. Pigmentation and melanocyte regulation

 

Though less widely recognised, the microbiome plays a role in melanogenesis, particularly via its influence on oxidative stress and inflammatory signalling. Commensals can produce antioxidant compounds and reduce the presence of reactive oxygen species that otherwise stimulate melanocyte activation.

 

In dysbiosis, this protective effect is diminished, contributing to pigmentary disorders such as melasma, post-inflammatory hyperpigmentation, and UV-induced discolouration.
Moreover, inflammation-induced pigmentation often persists when microbial modulation is not addressed.

 

7. Cellular Turnover and Regeneration

 

Commensal microbes influence the rate of epidermal turnover, partly through the regulation of epidermal growth factor pathways and inflammatory checkpoints.

A healthy microbiome supports efficient desquamation and re-epithelialisation, essential for both skin maintenance and recovery from procedures or injury.

In a dysbiotic state, turnover becomes erratic or delayed, contributing to uneven texture, residual redness, or prolonged post-intervention sensitivity.

Taken together, these insights redefine microbial balance not merely as a co-factor in skin health, but as a biological foundation. When intact, the skin microbiome:
 

→ Preserves barrier integrity
→ Prevents chronic inflammation
→ Regulates pigmentation
→ Supports hydration and structural renewal
→ Buffers neurogenic reactivity
→ Accelerates repair and recovery

 

By contrast, when dysbiosis develops, whether from antibiotics, environmental stress, diet, poor sleep, or inappropriate topical routines, these essential functions are compromised, giving rise to a wide spectrum of inflammatory, pigmentary, textural, and age-associated concerns.

 

In this view, supporting the microbiome is not one intervention among others, it is the entry point into a regenerative model of skin care. A model in which skin is supported as a living organ in dialogue with the gut, the nervous system, and its microbial ecosystem.

1. Biology-led and microbiome-centred

 

AWvi operates at the intersection of dermatology, microbiome science, and regenerative biology. Through a systems biology lens, each solution is engineered to work with the body’s biological pathways of protection, regulation and regeneration.

 

Each formula, nutraceutical and cosmeceutical, targets these pathways with biomimetic precision, enabling personalised, layered, and long-range strategies tailored to the individual’s skin type, concern, or physiological state.

 

At the core of AWvi’s method lies the microbiome as a foundational regulator of skin integrity, inflammation, and regeneration, combined with a structural support of mitochondrial function, dermal architecture, barrier defence, and immune setpoint, to address the deeper biological networks that underlie a wide range of conditions from chronic skin concerns to ageing skin.

 

2. In and Out approach

 

The combination of oral and topical interventions is not additive, it is multiplicative.

AWvi’s clinical data show an average 2.1-fold increase in efficacy when the nutraceutical is combined with one or more cosmeceutical solutions, compared with either route alone. This innovative combination approach has been recognized through the granting of a patent.

 

This is because the gut-skin axis, barrier function, immune regulation, and cell energy production are not isolated targets, but intersecting axes of resilience.

This also makes AWvi fully compatible with aesthetic procedures or dermatological treatments, helping to:
 

→ Amplify results,
→ Improve tissue quality and recovery,
→ Extend the benefits of the intervention over time,
→ Minimise recurrence of chronic conditions,
→ Generate added benefits thanks to its wide-ranging impact.

 

3. Supporting interconnected skin functions

 

No single axis defines skin health. Microbial balance, immune regulation, energy metabolism, and structural integrity must all be engaged to achieve long-term skin function and resilience.

Each AWvi solution operates as a precision tool acting on a distinct but interlinked domain of skin biology, leveraging systemic and structural effects, through the modulation of key pathways in microbial balance, inflammation resolution, epidermal renewal, and dermal architecture.

 

This is not about a cosmetic routine. It is about activating and sustaining the logic of living skin.