Glycation is a non-enzymatic chemical reaction in which sugar molecules (like glucose) bind to proteins or lipids, forming compounds called Advanced Glycation End-products (AGEs). In skin biology, AGEs cause collagen fibres to become stiff, cross-linked and discoloured, reducing elasticity and resilience. Over time, this leads to wrinkles, loss of firmness and dull skin tone. The Maillard reaction (the same browning reaction in cooking) is a visible example of glycation chemistry. Diets high in sugar and fried or roasted fats accelerate AGE formation, while antioxidants and certain phytochemicals like rutin, EGCG and curcumin help inhibit it.
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Article by Star Khechara
Professional agehacker, author, speaker, founder of skin nutrition institute
About me
Ex-skincare formulator and beauty author turned skin-nutrition educator: Star distilled her 20+ years of skin-health knowledge into the worldâs first international accredited skin-nutrition school to teach skin therapists, facialists, face yoga practitioners and estheticians how to help their clients feed the skin from within for cellular-level rejuvenation and vibrant beauty.
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