Quick Comparison

ResveratrolVitamin E (Tocopherol)
Typical ConcentrationConcentrations: 0.5-2% in skincare products. Most stable when combined with vitamin E and formulated in anhydrous (water-free) or encapsulated systems. Apply at night (some evidence of photosensitivity). Often combined with other polyphenols (green tea, ferulic acid).Concentrations: 0.5-2% in formulations. Most commonly used at 1% alongside vitamin C (15%) and ferulic acid (0.5%). Higher concentrations can feel greasy and may cause breakouts in acne-prone skin. D-alpha-tocopherol (natural) is more potent than DL-alpha-tocopherol (synthetic).
ApplicationTopical (serum, cream). Best in dark, airless packaging. Some products combine with vitamin E for stabilization.Topical (serum, cream, oil). Best in combination with vitamin C and ferulic acid. Apply in the morning under sunscreen.
Research Papers10 papers10 papers
Categories

Mechanism of Action

Resveratrol

Resveratrol activates SIRT1 (sirtuin 1), a NAD+-dependent deacetylase that deacetylates histones and non-histone targets including p53, FOXO transcription factors, and NF-κB, regulating cellular stress response, DNA repair, autophagy, and inflammatory pathways in keratinocytes and fibroblasts. It scavenges superoxide anion, hydroxyl radical, and metal-induced free radicals through its phenolic hydroxyl groups. Resveratrol inhibits NF-κB nuclear translocation and downstream cytokine production (TNF-α, IL-1β, IL-6), reducing UV-induced inflammation. It inhibits tyrosinase (mild brightening), matrix metalloproteinase-9 (MMP-9, gelatinase B) to prevent collagen and elastin breakdown, and AP-1 (c-Fos/c-Jun) to reduce photoaging-related gene expression. It may also activate Nrf2, upregulating antioxidant enzymes (HO-1, NQO1). Topical application achieves higher skin tissue concentrations than oral supplementation due to first-pass metabolism. Stability is improved in anhydrous or encapsulated formulations.

Vitamin E (Tocopherol)

Vitamin E (alpha-tocopherol) is the skin's primary lipid-soluble antioxidant, concentrated in stratum corneum and sebum. Donates hydrogen from chromanol ring to neutralize lipid peroxyl radicals (LOO•), preventing peroxidation chain reaction in cell membranes. After donating, becomes tocopheroxyl radical, regenerated by vitamin C via ascorbate-tocopherol cycle — why C+E+ferulic is synergistic. Modulates UV-induced inflammation: inhibits protein kinase C, NF-kappa B activation, reduces PGE2 synthesis. Inhibits 5-lipoxygenase, decreasing leukotriene production. Accumulates in sebaceous glands, delivered via sebum as first-line antioxidant defense. Protects polyunsaturated fatty acids from oxidative damage.

Risks & Safety

Resveratrol

Common

May cause redness or irritation in sensitive skin. Stability concerns — degrades with light and air.

Serious

None.

Rare

Allergic reaction.

Vitamin E (Tocopherol)

Common

Can feel heavy/greasy at high concentrations. May cause breakouts in acne-prone skin.

Serious

Contact dermatitis (uncommon).

Rare

Allergic reactions. Pure vitamin E oil on wounds may worsen scarring in some people.

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