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Glycoconjugates
Scientific breakdown of the snail's fluid complex we collect, shows it contains complex glycoconjugates, such as glycosaminoglycans and proteoglycans. These are molecules made mainly of sulfated sugar or carbohydrate chains (sugar= glyco), globular soluble proteins, uronic acids and oligoelements (copper, zinc, calcium and iron).
Proteoglycans and Glycosaminoglycans are active regulators of cell function, participate in cell-matrix interactions and play an important biological role in fibroblasts proliferation, differentiation and migration by effectively modulating the cellular phenotype
Proteoglycans are complex macromolecules consisting of a core protein and one or more covalently attached glycosaminoglycan chains. The biological functions of proteoglycans primarily result from the structurally dominant glycosaminoglycans emanating from the protein core of the molecule. A large number of animal species contain GAGs and mollusks are a particularly rich source of these polysaccharides. GAGs are usually found in the extracellular matrix of vertebrate and invertebrate tissues. A structural investigation revealed that GAGs in invertebrate species often contain unusual variations of sulfate distribution and uronic acids.
The major glycoconjugate of snail mucous is a glycosaminoglycan, with a novel structure when compared to other known glycosaminoglycans, secreted from granules within the snail's body and is localized on the outer surface, as a result of exposure of the snail to stress.
What are glycosaminoglycans?
They are carbohydrates and are the often-overlooked third major class of biological polymers. Though they have received much less notice than nucleic acids or proteins, they are just as essential for life.
Glycosaminoglycans (GAGs) or mucopolysaccharides are long unbranched polysaccharides, made up of repeating disaccharides that may be sulphated (e.g. glucuronic acid, iduronic acid, galactose, galactosamine, glucosamine).
GAGs form an important component of connective tissues. GAG chains may be covalently linked to a protein to form proteoglycans .
Dermatan sulfate is a glycosaminoglycan found mostly in skin, but also in blood vessels, heart valves, tendons, and lungs. Dermatan sulfate may have roles in coagulation, cardiovascular disease, carcinogenesis, infection, wound repair, and fibrosis.
Chondroitin sulfate is a sulfated glycosaminoglycan (GAG) composed of a chain of alternating sugars (N-acetyl-galactosamine and glucuronic acid). It is usually found attached to proteins as part of a proteoglycan. A chondroitin chain can have over 100 individual sugars, each of which can be sulfated in variable positions and quantities. Understanding the functions of such diversity in chondroitin sulfate and related glycosaminoglycans is a major goal of glycobiology. Chondroitin sulfate is a major structural component of cartilage and provides much of its resistance to compression.
Complex sugars, or glycans, which are generally bound to proteins, coat the outsides of cells and fill the spaces between them. Crucial in normal animal development and in preventing many diseases, glycans appear to act as scaffolds that mediate interactions between proteins.
Carbohydrates are indispensable to life on Earth. In their simplest form, they serve as a primary energy source for sustaining life. For the most part, however, carbohydrates exist not as simple sugars but as complex molecular conjugates, or glycans. Glycans come in many shapes and sizes, from linear chains (polysaccharides) to highly branched molecules bristling with antennae-like arms. And although proteins and nucleic acids such as DNA have traditionally attracted far more scientific attention, glycans are also key to life. They are ubiquitous in nature, forming the intricate sugar coat that surrounds the cells of virtually every organism and occupying the spaces between these cells. As part of this so-called extracellular matrix, glycans, with their diverse chemical structures, play a crucial role in transmitting important biochemical signals into and between cells. In this way, these sugars guide the cellular communication that is essential for normal cell and tissue development and physiological function.
The Sweet Science of Glycobiology
Complex carbohydrates, molecules that are particularly important for communication among cells, are coming under systematic study. Ram Sasisekharan and James R. Myette See: Glycobiology . Research in this new field sheds a good deal of light on the role of Helix Aspersa Müller glycoconjugates, the main biological ingredient in all our products.
The central paradigm of modern molecular biology is that biological information flows from DNA to RNA to protein. The power of this concept lies not only in its template-driven precision, but also in the ability to manipulate any one class of molecules based on knowledge of another, and in the patterns of sequence homology and relatedness that predict function and reveal evolutionary relationships. With the upcoming completion of the genomic sequences of humans and several other commonly studied model organisms, even more spectacular gains in the understanding of biological systems are anticipated. However, there is often a tendency to assume the following extension of the central paradigm:
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In actual fact, creating a cell requires two other major classes of molecules: lipids and carbohydrates. These molecules can serve as intermediates in generating energy, as signaling molecules, or as structural components.
The structural roles of carbohydrates are particularly important in the construction of complex multicellular organs and organisms, which require interactions of cells with one another and with the surrounding matrix. Indeed, all cells and many macromolecules in nature carry a dense and complex array of covalently attached sugar chains (called oligosaccharides or glycans). In some instances, these glycans can also be free-standing entities.
Since most glycans are on the outer surface of cellular and secreted macromolecules, they are in a position to modulate or mediate a wide variety of events in cell-cell and cell-matrix interactions crucial to the development and function of all complex multicellular organisms and also interactions between organisms (e.g., between host and parasite). In addition, simple, highly dynamic protein-bound glycans are abundant in the nucleus and cytoplasm, where they appear to serve as regulatory switches.
An extended paradigm of molecular biology can thus be rendered as follows:

The development of a variety of new technologies for exploring the structures of these sugar chains has opened up a new frontier of molecular biology which has been called glycobiology. This word was first coined in 1988 by Rademacher, Parekh, and Dwek to recognize the coming together of the traditional disciplines of carbohydrate chemistry and biochemistry with modern understanding of the cellular and molecular biology of glycans. The term glycobiology has gained wide acceptance, with a major biomedical journal, a growing scientific society, and a Gordon Research Conference now bearing this name.
Defined in the broadest sense, glycobiology is the study of the structure, biosynthesis, and biology of saccharides (sugar chains or glycans) that are widely distributed in nature. It is one of the most rapidly growing fields in the biomedical sciences, with relevance to basic research, biomedicine, and biotechnology. Indeed, several biotechnology, pharmaceutical, and laboratory supply companies have invested heavily in the area. The field ranges from the chemistry of carbohydrates and the enzymology of glycan-modifying proteins to the functions of glycans in complex biological systems, and their manipulation by a variety of techniques.
Glycosaminoglycans
In recent years, important studies of a class of linear glycans (complex sugar chains) known as glycosaminoglycans (or GAGs for short), and particularly a sub-set known as HSGAGs, which are made up of heparan sulfate and its relative heparin have been specifically important in shedding a good deal of light on the role of the glycoconjugates in our products.
Building the Chains
An HSGAG chain may be generically described as a linear repeat of approximately 10 to 100 disaccharide building blocks that, when linked together, make up the backbone of each sugar molecule. In its most fundamental form, each disaccharide unit consists of two chemically distinct monosaccharides (a uronic acid and a glucosamine) linked by a glycosidic bond.
The chains can vary a great deal in their structural configuration because the disaccharide building blocks may be chemically modified at a number of positions. These modifications include the removal of the two-carbon acetyl groups at the amino position of the glucosamine portion and the addition of sulfate groups at several different positions, along with distinctions in the stereochemical arrangement of bonds around specific carbons.
Different combinations of these various chemical modifications make it possible for even short chains to have an enormous number of structural permutations. In fact, the potential for an immense quantity of structural information to be embedded in a glycan exceeds that of nucleic acids or proteins.
Unlike the synthesis of DNA, RNA or proteins, however, glycan synthesis does not depend on a template that codes for the exact sequence of building blocks in a new chain, to be faith-fully replicated over and over again as an identical copy. Instead, GAGs are synthesized through the concerted action of a large repertoire of enzymes whose existence and relative activities vary greatly. In short, HSGAG biosynthesis is a multi-step process with multiple enzyme players.
Most of the enzymes involved in HSGAG biosynthesis are now known, but exactly how the process of synthesis plays out is still very much an open question. Little is known about the ratio of enzymes or, even more basically, whether they act independently or co-operatively in a multi-enzyme complex.
It is known that HSGAGs are made inside the cell in the membranes of the organelles known as the Golgi apparatus. Nearly all the enzymes involved with making HSGAGs either span the organelle's membranes or are at least peripherally associated with them. This arrangement essentially restricts the interaction of these enzymes to two dimensions within a lipid lattice.
Although the complete biochemical picture is not yet known, it is likely that the enzymes for HSGAG biosynthesis come together within the Golgi membrane, perhaps as the chain is being assembled.
For the most part, glycans do not exist at the cell surface or in the extracellular matrix (ECM) as free-standing polymers. Rather, they are assembled onto specific proteins to form protein-glycan conjugates, or proteoglycans. With the exception of heparin, which is made as a free-standing sugar polymer, HSGAGs are generally found in three major classes of proteoglycans.
A major distinction among these proteoglycans may be found in their particular arrangement relative to the cell surface. In syndecans, the core proteins cross the cell membrane. Glypicans are also inserted into membranes, but by a lipid anchor connected to the core protein. Perlecans reside in the ECM. There is much evidence that the particular composition of glycans attached to each core protein is not random.
Structure Determines Function
Proteoglycans are unique and structurally complex macromolecules. A clue to the function of HSGAG proteoglycans comes from the list of important proteins with which they bind in discrete spatial and temporal interactions.
These proteins include many key growth factors and growth-factor receptors, proteins involved in tissue and organ development, others involved in immune and inflammatory responses, some that mediate cell adhesion, and so on. Like proteoglycans, the proteins that associate with them generally reside outside cells, either near cell membranes or dispersed throughout the ECM. Many of these proteins circulate in the blood, where they are involved in processes such as blood coagulation, wound healing and tissue repair.
The interactions between glycans and the proteins they bind too reveal connections between structure and activity. These interactions have often been ascribed merely to the noncovalent electrostatic attraction between negatively charged sugars and positively charged proteins. A closer look, however, reveals that many protein-glycan interactions are in fact structurally selective.
An example of such specific interactions: the binding of HSGAGs to fibroblast growth factor
Fibroblast growth factor signaling elegantly illustrates the concept of HSGAGs bringing proteins together. In particular, the glycans facilitate the interaction of fibroblast growth factor with its receptor at the cell surface. The binding of growth factor to its receptor sets in motion a signaling cascade that ends up in the cell's nucleus, turning on genes that modulate cellular proliferation. To trigger this cascade, a receptor embedded in the cell membrane needs to undergo a structural change, a change that occurs when one receptor interacts simultaneously with a second receptor. It seems that the FGF molecules outside the cell (at least in the case of the growth factor known as FGF-2) must themselves form a dimer, or pair, to bring two receptors together on the cell surface. Certain studies have shown that FGF signaling may not absolutely require the presence of the glycan; yet in this convergence of molecules glycans do serve as a sort of glue, holding the entire complex together in the proper configuration necessary for maximal signal transduction.

GLYCOBALM for Acne Treatment
A gentle yet powerful solution for acne breakouts and even stubborn acne cysts that have not been amenable to other treatments
This acne cream yields what no other natural acne product does for recurrent stubborn acne and acne cysts because of the synergistic benefit of combining our biological serum with the most potent botanicals:
a) Inca Inchi Oil the richest vegetable oil in Omega-3 fatty acids. A powerful anti-inflammatory and with the ability to correct the deficit of linoleic acid in hair follicles which is a trigger of immoderate inflammatory reactions from our immune system. The oil is also a factor that reduces sebum output;
b) Helix Aspersa Müller Glycoconjugates, the miraculous serum, from a living creature with skin similar to human skin who never suffers from skin infections and acts as an effective adaptogen, anti-inflammatory, antioxidant, trigger of skin repair and skin regeneration, and enzyme dissolver of blocked pores;
c) Licorice Root Extract (*) an antimicrobial with potent activity against acne bacteria, anti-inflammatory, anti-irritant, antioxidant, and an inhibitor of sebum production;
d) Alpine Willow herb extract (Epilobium Fleischeri) a botanical source of keratolytic salicylic acid in a natural form, and an antimicrobial;
e) Essential oil from the roots of Coleus Forskohlii with strong antimicrobial activity and a strong medicinal smell that you might not appreciate for about 20 minutes until it fades away.
The smell is a small price you pay for an "essential" component of BIOSKINFORTE for it activates many of your more than 10 million olfactory receptor neurones. But its nothing = "nada" when compared to the value you get: the strongest remedy that effectively heals and contains acne breakouts without any side effects on your body or skin. You always have the choice to behave as if you were a warrior and just use the product without previously messing with your nose inside the jar.
f) Hyaluronic Acid a glycosaminoglycan (also present in the snail serum) that deeply moisturizes the skin and restores the capacity of the skin to hold in water;
g) An extract from the fruit of black pepper which enhances the penetration of the active ingredients.
Apply a little of this acne cream twice a day on all the area affected by acne cysts or stubborn pimples (whole face, chest or back).

Made in the USA. One Month Supply 50 grams = 1.76 oz
$69.98
(*) A New Dermatological Availability of the Flavonoid Fraction from Licorice Roots-Effect on Acne
Journal of Society Cosmetic Chemists Japan, VOL.37; NO.3; PAGE. 179-186(2003) Authors: Kambara Toshimitsua, Zhou Y, Kawashima Yoshihitoa, Kishida Naokoa, Mizutani Kenjia, Ikeda Takaoa, Kameyama Koichirob.
a) Research Center, Maruzen Pharmaceuticals Co., Ltd., 1089-8 Sagata, Shin-ichi, Fukuyama, 729-3102 Hiroshima, Japan. b) Aoyama Dermatological Clinic, dr@aoyamahihuka.com 5-1-3 Aoyama 8F Minato-ku Tokyo 107 Japan. Link: Licorice Roots-Effect on Acne
Abstract: Licochalcone-A, Polyol Soluble Licorice Extract P-U (now in the market as Licochalcone LR-15), prepared from the roots of Glycyrrhiza Inflata Batalin shows several activities such as inhibitory actions of testosterone 5 ALPHA-reductase, lipase and phospholipase A2, as well as androgen receptor antagonist, antimicrobial and SOD-like antioxidant actions, which relate to skin care, especially the suppression of acne formation and development. On basis of this evidence, a trial with acne patients was carried out and the efficacy of the extract was demonstrated clinically.
Check also our specialty natural skin care products: BIO SKIN REJUVENATION to get rid of brown sun spots, BIOSKINEXFOL for the treatment of old acne scars, and BIO STRETCH MARK CREAM for the prevention and treatment of new stretch marks.
BIOCUTIS skin treatment products
GLYCOBALM

Strongest natural acne treatment cream or balm, based on the natural glycoconjugates compound produced by snails to function as its powerful immune modulator and skin regeneration trigger. Removes dead cells, unclogs sebum canals and dissolves scar tissues by enzymatic hydrolysis, without peeling. Promotes the secretion of antimicrobial peptides on the skin surface and those keep bacteria at bay and control acne. Boosts the production of glycosaminoglycans, the molecules that hold in water in the dermis, thus truly moisturizing the skin from within. Communicates to your immune system that you are being taken care of and can moderate an otherwise extreme inflammatory reaction that may end up destroying healthy skin cells together with bacteria and sebum that has turned into a foreign matter. 50 gram (1.76 oz) $69.98
BIOSKINCARE

A natural skin care balm that triggers the regeneration of damaged cells, deeply moisturizes and replenishes the lipid barrier of the skin while repairing skin lesions, preventing and dissolving scars left behing by acne inflammation, and scarring from accidental injuries and surgery; stretch marks; abnormal scars of the types hypertrophic and keloid; keratois pilaris plugs, actinic keratosis scales, dermatitis, psoriasis scales and all types of skin blemishes. 50 gram (1.76 oz) jar = $59.98 and for two or more 20% discount.
BIOSKINEXFOL™
A home microdermabrasion cream with high quality microcrystals, the same that professionals use to break-down and polish or resurface hard, rough and old scar tissues. Allows for a deeper penetration of our biological skin moisturizing and regeneration complex that is combined with the crystals in the microdermabrasion cream. 120 gram (4 oz) jar = $79
BIO STRETCH MARK CREAM™

Helps to prevent stretch marks, strengthen fragile skin, firm sagging breasts and body areas and reduce cellulite. It also works for new formed stretch marks and scars, while BIOSKINEXFOL is recommended for old, rough and raised marks. This product is similar to BIOACNECARE, although in an economic tottle, with 6 oz. For use preferably on the body, not on the face, for it contains a higher concentration of the biological complex which results in an invisible film that retains in moisture by occluding the area where it is applied and could feel a little tacky on the face depending on how oily is your facial skin. 6 oz (180g) tottle = $118.50
BIO SKIN REJUVENATION™
Same cream base with intercellular communicating ingredients and enzymes as in BIOACNECARE to "digest" or dissolve blemishes, speed skin turnover, moisturize and tighten skin, plus two added ingredients: a natural pigment reducer and a human growth factor peptide, derived from the melanocyte-stimulating-hormone that blocks melanin synthesis, and inhibits the formation of unwanted pigmentation, allowing control over skin tone and brown spots. Leaves skin bright and refreshed! 50 gram (1.76 oz) jar = $69.98
Customer's Testimonials and Tips:
It heals my acne. This formula is a 'miracle'. It has performed miracles, that my doctor could not, with several prescriptions. I have only used for 1.5 months, and already, I am 'looking healed and gooood', which makes me feel good!!! Thanks again! K. In Hou. Texas. USA
I have seen more of a result, with this product than any others I have tried for acne scars. My scars are not as deep as they were and my face is smoother looking, it is working great on my small crow's feet too, by my eyes...they look hardly noticeable now, thank you for this wonderful product! Violet Wood. Florida, US
