Quick Comparison

Matrixyl (Palmitoyl Pentapeptide-4)Rosehip Seed Oil
Typical ConcentrationTypically used at 2-8% in formulations. Applied morning and/or night. Compatible with virtually all other active ingredients. Often found combined with Matrixyl 3000 (palmitoyl tripeptide-1 + palmitoyl tetrapeptide-7) for enhanced effects.Apply 2-4 drops in the evening after water-based serums. Can be used morning (under sunscreen) but the natural retinoid content makes PM use preferred. Cold-pressed, unrefined oil is orange-red. Goes rancid relatively quickly — store in fridge and use within 3-6 months.
ApplicationTopical (serum, cream). Water-soluble base. Apply to clean skin. Compatible with acids, retinoids, and vitamin C.Topical (pure oil). Apply 2-4 drops as last step of PM routine. Cold-pressed, unrefined.
Research Papers2 papers5 papers
Categories

Mechanism of Action

Matrixyl (Palmitoyl Pentapeptide-4)

Matrixyl (palmitoyl pentapeptide-4, Pal-KTTKS) is a matrikine—a bioactive collagen fragment mimicking Lys-Thr-Thr-Lys-Ser from the alpha-1 chain of collagen I. This sequence binds integrin receptors on dermal fibroblasts, triggering TGF-beta/Smad and MAPK/ERK signaling that upregulates ECM synthesis genes. Fibroblasts increase production of collagen I, III, IV, fibronectin, elastin, and glycosaminoglycans including hyaluronic acid—recreating the wound-healing signal without tissue damage. The C16 palmitoyl chain enhances lipophilicity and stratum corneum penetration via intercellular lipid partitioning. Unlike retinoids, Matrixyl does not accelerate epidermal turnover, explaining its lack of irritation. Clinical studies show wrinkle reduction comparable to retinol.

Rosehip Seed Oil

Natural trans-retinoic acid content (0.01-0.04%) binds RAR receptors in keratinocytes and fibroblasts, promoting cell turnover, collagen type I synthesis, and keratinocyte differentiation at gentle level without retinization. Linoleic acid (44%) supports barrier repair through ceramide synthesis, balances sebum composition (acne-prone skin often deficient). Alpha-linolenic acid (33%) converts to anti-inflammatory metabolites, supports barrier function. Beta-carotene and lycopene provide antioxidant protection and mild photoprotection. Unique combination among plant oils: natural retinoid plus essential fatty acids plus antioxidants — no other oil provides all three. Contains tocopherols. Quickly absorbed. Clinical use: scars, hyperpigmentation, fine lines — subtle but measurable anti-aging effects compared to inert oils.

Risks & Safety

Matrixyl (Palmitoyl Pentapeptide-4)

Common

Essentially none — peptides are extremely well-tolerated.

Serious

None documented. Safe in pregnancy.

Rare

Minimal risk of allergic reaction.

Rosehip Seed Oil

Common

May cause breakouts in oily/acne-prone skin. Goes rancid quickly if not stored properly.

Serious

None.

Rare

Allergic reaction (rose family).

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