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How Omega-6 Fatty Acids support repair, healing and skin microbiome.

  • 19 févr.
  • 3 min de lecture

Skin has an incredible ability to heal itself. Every small cut, irritation, or blemish triggers a complex biological process designed to restore balance and protect the body.

Scientists are now discovering that certain nutrients — especially omega-6 fatty acids — may play an important role in supporting this natural repair system. But how does that actually work?

Let’s break it down in simple terms.


How Omega-6 Fatty Acids support  repair, healing and skin microbiome.

What happens when is skin damaged and starts to heal?


When skin is injured, the body doesn’t just “close the wound.” Instead, it goes through three overlapping stages:


  1. Inflammation — the clean-up phase

    Right after damage, immune cells rush to the area to fight bacteria and remove debris. This phase is essential — without it, healing cannot begin.


  2. Proliferation — rebuilding new tissue

    Right after damage, immune cells rush to the area to fight bacteria and remove debris. This phase is essential — without it, healing cannot begin.


  3. Re-modeling — strengthening the skin

    Right after damage, immune cells rush to the area to fight bacteria and remove debris. This phase is essential — without it, healing cannot begin.


Why fatty acids matter for skin?


Omega-6 fatty acids are a group of essential nutrients that the body cannot produce on its own. They are part of the skin barrier and influence how cells communicate, grow, and repair themselves.


  • Support skin hydration and elasticity

  • Influence inflammation signals

  • Help cells migrate and rebuild tissue

  • Assist in forming new blood vessels during healing




The omega-6 fatty acids we use


Plum seed oil: the skin barrier and microbiome supporter

Linoleic Acid —

the skin barrier supporter

from up-cycled

organic plum seed oil


  • Improves skin hydration

  • Encourages healthy inflammation early in healing

  • Helps skin cells multiply faster

  • Supports new blood vessel formation






Black currant seed oil: the skin barrier and microbiome supporter

Gamma-Linolenic Acid (GLA) —

the calming influence

from up-cycled

organic black currant seed oil


  • Reduces inflammation

  • Supports healthier immune responses in the skin

  • Improves certain skin concerns linked to irritation





How Omega-6 Fatty Acids Interact With the Skin Microbiome

The skin microbiome is the ecosystem of bacteria, fungi, and microorganisms living on the skin surface. These microbes depend heavily on the lipid environment of the skin — and omega-6 fatty acids are part of that environment. Instead of acting like probiotics, omega-6 fatty acids mainly help by strengthening the barrier and regulating inflammation, which creates better conditions for beneficial microbes.


1. They Help Maintain a Strong Skin Barrier

Linoleic acid and other omega-6 lipids are structural components of the stratum corneum.

A healthy barrier means:

  • balanced moisture levels

  • stable skin pH

  • fewer gaps where harmful bacteria can grow

When the barrier is intact, the microbiome tends to stay more diverse and resilient.


2. They Influence Microbial Balance Through Lipids

Skin microbes use sebum lipids as part of their environment.

  • Low linoleic acid levels are linked to disrupted barrier function and acne-prone skin.

  • Balanced fatty acid profiles may discourage overgrowth of certain microbes associated with inflammation.

This is one reason plant oils rich in linoleic acid are often explored for acne-prone or reactive skin types.


3. They Help Regulate Inflammation — Which Shapes the Microbiome

Inflammation changes the skin’s ecosystem.

Omega-6 fatty acids can:

  • support early immune responses

  • help calm excessive inflammatory signals later

Balanced inflammation creates a more stable environment where beneficial bacteria can thrive instead of opportunistic species dominating.



Skin healing is a delicate balance of biology, nutrition, and environment. Omega-6 fatty acids appear to play a surprisingly important role — influencing everything from inflammation to tissue rebuilding and supporting skin microbiome.

Rather than acting as quick fixes, these nutrients work behind the scenes, supporting the skin’s natural ability to restore itself. And perhaps that’s the most fascinating part: sometimes, the smallest molecules can have the biggest impact on how skin renews and protects itself.


Selling fast
M—0B6 REGENERATIVE BOTANICAL SERUM BAKUCHIOL 2%
From€39.00
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— Formulated with powerful phyto-retinol bakuchiol— Helps restore skin barrier and skin renewal— Fights premature aging and oxidation

— 100% natural — 95,9% organic  — 55,5% upcycled — Vegan


INGREDIENTS

— 2 % bakuchiol (COSMOS certified)

— Pomegranate seed oil*

— Seabuckthorn fruit oil*

— Plum seed oil*

— Blackcurrant seed oil*

*Organic


 
 
 

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