DRAFT — For Practitioner Review Only Version 0.1  ·  June 2026  ·  Not for clinical use or distribution beyond this review cohort
Micro-Learning · Module 03 02 of 03 — This Series AptiusIQ

Skin biology —
face, neck & décolletage

A layer-by-layer examination of skin structure, regional variation, and the physiological basis for aesthetic treatment decisions.

Reading time30–40 minutes
LevelAll levels — tiered content
CategorySkin science & physiology
Last reviewedJune 2026

Learning objectives

Section 01

Overview of skin structure

The skin is the body's largest organ, comprising approximately 15–16% of total body weight in the average adult. It is a complex, multilayered structure that performs barrier, thermoregulatory, sensory, immunological, and endocrine functions. For the aesthetic practitioner, understanding skin structure is not academic — it directly determines treatment selection, depth of delivery, expected response, and risk profile for every modality used in clinic.

The skin is divided into three primary layers: the epidermis (outermost, avascular epithelium), the dermis (connective tissue scaffold containing vessels, nerves, and appendages), and the hypodermis (subcutaneous adipose and connective tissue). Each layer has distinct properties, cell populations, and clinical relevance.

Foundation note

A common early-career misunderstanding is that the skin is a uniform, passive barrier. It is neither. The skin is metabolically active, immunologically dynamic, and structurally complex — responding to both intrinsic biological signals and extrinsic environmental stressors. Every aesthetic intervention, from a topical to a laser, interacts with specific layers of this architecture in specific ways.

Layer Approximate thickness (facial) Primary function Primary cell type
Epidermis 0.05–0.1 mm (eyelids) to 0.8 mm (palms) Barrier; UV protection; immune surveillance Keratinocytes (90–95%)
Dermal–epidermal junction ~0.5–1 µm (basement membrane zone) Adhesion; signalling; filtration Anchoring complex (laminins, collagens IV/VII)
Dermis — papillary 0.1–0.2 mm Epidermal nutrition; fine sensory function; collagen I support Fibroblasts; mast cells; capillary loops
Dermis — reticular 1–4 mm (facial variation) Structural support; tensile strength; elasticity Fibroblasts; collagen I/III bundles; elastic fibres
Hypodermis Variable; 1–10 mm facial adipose Insulation; energy reserve; volumetric support; shock absorption Adipocytes; fibroblasts; immune cells

Section 02

The epidermis

The epidermis is a stratified squamous epithelium that is continuously renewed through a process called keratinocyte differentiation. Stem cells in the deepest layer (stratum basale) divide and migrate upward toward the skin surface, progressively differentiating and losing their nuclei before being shed as dead corneocytes at the surface. This process — epidermal turnover — takes approximately 28–40 days in young adults and slows significantly with age.

The epidermis is avascular (it receives nutrients by diffusion from the papillary dermis) and is divided into five distinct strata. In thick skin (palms and soles) all five layers are consistently present. In thin facial skin, the stratum lucidum may be absent or attenuated.

Outermost layer
Stratum corneum
The "horny layer"
Structure15–20 layers of flattened, anucleate, keratin-filled cells (corneocytes) embedded in a lipid-rich extracellular matrix (ceramides, cholesterol, free fatty acids — the "bricks and mortar" model). Thickness: 10–15 µm on the face; up to 600 µm on the palms.
FunctionPrimary physical and chemical barrier against environmental insults, UV radiation, microorganisms, and transepidermal water loss (TEWL). The lipid matrix is critical to barrier function — disruption of this layer leads to dehydration and increased permeability.
Aesthetic relevanceThe primary target of topical skincare and superficial chemical peels. Stratum corneum integrity determines product penetration — an intact, well-hydrated SC limits ingredient delivery, while a compromised SC (post-peel, post-laser, or in barrier-disrupted conditions such as rosacea) increases penetration and potential irritation. Retinoids, AHAs, and BHAs act primarily at this layer to normalise desquamation and barrier function.
Key cellsCorneocytes (terminally differentiated keratinocytes, no nucleus). Lamellar granules release lipid precursors into the intercellular space at the stratum granulosum–corneum transition.
Layer 4 of 5 (from base)
Stratum granulosum
The "granular layer" — 2–5 cell layers thick
StructureFlattened keratinocytes containing basophilic keratohyalin granules (rich in profilaggrin and loricrin) and membrane-coating lamellar granules. Cells at this level begin to lose their nuclei.
FunctionLamellar granules exocytose their lipid contents into the intercellular space, forming the lipid barrier of the stratum corneum. Profilaggrin is cleaved to filaggrin, which aggregates keratin filaments — essential for corneocyte compaction.
Aesthetic relevanceFilaggrin breakdown products (pyrrolidone carboxylic acid, urocanic acid) are natural moisturising factors (NMF) — primary contributors to stratum corneum hydration. Filaggrin gene mutations (associated with atopic dermatitis) produce barrier dysfunction. Understanding NMF guides the rationale for humectant use in skincare protocols.
Layer 3 of 5 (from base)
Stratum spinosum
The "spinous layer" or "prickle cell layer" — 8–10 cell layers thick
StructurePolyhedral keratinocytes connected by abundant desmosomes (intercellular "spot-weld" junctions), giving a spiny appearance on histology. Keratin filaments (K1/K10) are prominent. Langerhans cells are distributed throughout this layer.
FunctionStructural cohesion of the epidermis through desmosomal connections. Continued keratinocyte differentiation. Langerhans cells perform immune surveillance — sampling antigens and presenting them to T lymphocytes.
Aesthetic relevanceDesmosomal proteins are the targets of pemphigus vulgaris autoantibodies — relevant in differential diagnosis of perioral erosions. Chemical peeling agents that penetrate to this layer (medium-depth peels, e.g. TCA 20–35%) stimulate significant epidermal regeneration. Laser ablation to this depth achieves reliable resurfacing with predictable re-epithelialisation.
Deepest epidermal layer
Stratum basale
The "basal layer" or "germinative layer" — single cell layer
StructureA single layer of columnar to cuboidal keratinocytes attached to the basement membrane via hemidesmosomes. Contains epidermal stem cells and post-mitotic keratinocytes. Also contains melanocytes (1 per ~10 keratinocytes) and Merkel cells.
FunctionContinuous cell division (mitosis) to replenish the overlying strata. Melanocytes produce melanin and transfer it via melanosomes to surrounding keratinocytes for UV photoprotection. Merkel cells serve as mechanoreceptors (light touch perception).
Aesthetic relevanceThe basal layer is the site of melanin production — the biological basis for UV-induced hyperpigmentation, post-inflammatory hyperpigmentation (PIH), and melasma. Melanocyte activity (not melanocyte number) is the primary determinant of dyspigmentation in most aesthetic presentations. Treatments targeting the basal layer include deep chemical peels (reaching the upper dermis), ablative laser resurfacing, and topical inhibitors of tyrosinase (hydroquinone, kojic acid, arbutin).
Advanced note — epidermal turnover and treatment timing

Epidermal turnover slows from approximately 28 days at age 20 to 45–60 days by age 60. This has direct implications for both the timeline of skin improvement following treatments and the accumulation of photodamage. A practitioner advising a patient on post-peel healing should calibrate their expectations based on the patient's age: a 55-year-old will re-epithelialise more slowly than a 30-year-old following an equivalent treatment depth. Retinoids (topical tretinoin) are among the few evidence-based interventions that normalise epidermal turnover toward a younger phenotype.

Section 03

The dermal–epidermal junction

The dermal–epidermal junction (DEJ), also called the basement membrane zone (BMZ), is the structural interface between the avascular epidermis and the vascularised dermis. It is a specialised extracellular matrix approximately 0.5–1 µm thick, comprising four distinct zones visible on electron microscopy: the basal keratinocyte plasma membrane, the lamina lucida, the lamina densa, and the sub-lamina densa zone.

Key structural components include laminin-332 (within the lamina lucida), collagen IV (forming the lamina densa network), and anchoring fibrils composed of collagen VII (extending into the papillary dermis). These components anchor the epidermis to the dermis and are essential for skin integrity.

Advanced note — DEJ and skin ageing

The DEJ undergoes significant structural changes with both chronological ageing and UV exposure. In young skin, the DEJ is characterised by prominent rete ridges — interdigitating projections of the epidermis that extend down into the dermis, dramatically increasing the surface area of the DEJ and the mechanical adhesion between layers. With intrinsic ageing and particularly UV exposure (photoageing), rete ridges flatten significantly. This reduces the DEJ surface area, weakens the epidermal–dermal bond, and contributes to the susceptibility of aged skin to shearing and blistering. Loss of rete ridges also reduces the basal surface area available for keratinocyte proliferation, contributing to epidermal thinning.

Treatments that stimulate collagen IV and laminin production at the DEJ level — including retinoids, fractional laser resurfacing, and microneedling — partially restore rete ridge architecture, a histologically validated mechanism of skin rejuvenation.

Section 04

The dermis

The dermis is the structural scaffold of the skin — a connective tissue layer that provides tensile strength, elasticity, hydration, and vascular and neural supply to the overlying epidermis. It is the primary target of most energy-based aesthetic devices, injectable fillers, and collagen-stimulating treatments. Its two sub-layers — the papillary and reticular dermis — have distinct properties and respond differently to ageing and treatment.

Immediately below the DEJ
Papillary dermis
Thin, loosely arranged connective tissue — 0.1–0.2 mm
StructureLoose connective tissue containing thin collagen I and III fibres, fine elastic fibres (oxytalan and elaunin), fibroblasts, mast cells, macrophages, and a rich capillary plexus (subepidermal plexus). Dermal papillae project upward into the epidermal rete ridges.
FunctionProvides nutrients to the avascular epidermis via diffusion from the capillary plexus. The dermal papillae form the structural basis of fingerprint patterns. Contains fine sensory nerve endings (Meissner's corpuscles for light touch).
Aesthetic relevanceThe papillary dermis is the primary zone targeted by superficial resurfacing procedures (light peels, non-ablative lasers, fractional RF at low density). Mast cells in this layer release histamine in response to laser or energy stimulation — producing the characteristic erythema and urticaria of post-treatment skin. Thin collagen fibres here are more susceptible to UV degradation than the robust bundles of the reticular dermis.
Below papillary dermis — bulk of dermis
Reticular dermis
Dense, irregularly arranged connective tissue — 1–4 mm facial
StructureDense irregular connective tissue comprising thick collagen I bundles (80% of dry weight), collagen III, and elastic fibres (elastin fibres of variable diameter). Also contains hair follicles, sebaceous glands, sweat glands (eccrine and apocrine), and the deep dermal vascular plexus. Fibroblasts are the primary cell type, responsible for collagen, elastin, and glycosaminoglycan (GAG) synthesis.
FunctionTensile strength, elasticity, and recoil of the skin. Glycosaminoglycans (particularly hyaluronic acid) within the ground substance bind water and maintain dermal hydration. Hair follicle cycling, sebum production, and sweat thermoregulation all originate here.
Aesthetic relevanceThe reticular dermis is the principal target of most collagen-stimulating treatments: ablative laser resurfacing, non-ablative fractional lasers (1440 nm, 1540 nm, 1550 nm), radiofrequency, high-intensity focused ultrasound (HIFU), and microneedling. The fibroblast is the key effector cell — stimulated by thermal or mechanical injury to upregulate collagen I/III, elastin, and hyaluronic acid synthesis. The depth of treatment penetration into the reticular dermis determines efficacy: too superficial produces only epidermal effects; too deep risks scarring. Hyaluronic acid fillers placed in the deep reticular dermis or deep dermis replicate the natural GAG scaffold, providing immediate volumisation and longer-term hydration.
Advanced note — collagen subtypes and treatment targets

Type I collagen comprises 80–85% of dermal collagen and provides tensile strength. Type III collagen (15–20%) is more elastic and predominates in fetal skin and early wound repair. The ratio of type I to type III shifts with ageing — type III proportionally increases as total collagen content declines, producing the characteristic laxity of aged skin despite apparent fibrous density on histology. Collagen-stimulating treatments (retinoids, laser, RF) preferentially upregulate type I collagen synthesis — their primary mechanism of clinical benefit. Collagen I synthesis requires adequate substrate: vitamin C (ascorbic acid) is an essential cofactor for prolyl and lysyl hydroxylases, enzymes critical to collagen triple-helix stabilisation. This is the mechanistic rationale for topical vitamin C in post-treatment skincare.

Section 05

The hypodermis

The hypodermis (subcutaneous tissue, or subcutis) lies below the reticular dermis and above the deep fascia or periosteum. It consists primarily of lobules of adipose tissue separated by fibrous septa. In the face, the hypodermis is organised into anatomically distinct fat compartments — both superficial (sub-SMAS) and deep (subperiosteal) — which are critical to facial volumetrics, the understanding of facial ageing, and the safe placement of dermal fillers.

Key facial fat compartments include the nasolabial fat, medial and lateral cheek fat, orbital fat (superficial and deep), temporal fat pad, and buccal fat pad (Bichat's fat pad). These compartments do not age uniformly: some deflate preferentially (medial cheek, orbital), whilst others may descend or herniate (buccal fat).

Clinical application — filler plane selection

The selection of injection plane for dermal filler is a direct application of layered skin anatomy. Superficial dermis injection produces surface-level definition (e.g. fine lip lines, tear trough). Mid-dermis injection provides lift and volume for moderate tissue deficiency. Deep dermis to supraperiosteal injection supports skeletal projection (cheekbones, chin, jawline, temples). Injection into or adjacent to a named fat compartment risks compartment disruption, asymmetric volume distribution, or — in the temporal and periorbital zones — vascular occlusion via proximity to named arteries. A thorough working knowledge of both the skin layers and the subcutaneous architecture is inseparable from safe filler practice.

Section 06

Key cell types of the skin

Each skin layer contains specialised cells that are directly relevant to aesthetic medicine — as targets of treatment, as mediators of healing, or as sources of common skin conditions.

Cell type Location Primary function Aesthetic relevance
Keratinocyte All epidermal layers Barrier formation; structural protein synthesis; cytokine signalling Re-epithelialisation following resurfacing; target of retinoids and AHAs; source of inflammatory cytokines in wound healing
Melanocyte Stratum basale; hair follicle Melanin synthesis (UV protection); melanin transfer to keratinocytes Source of dyspigmentation (melasma, PIH, solar lentigines); target of tyrosinase inhibitors, laser (QS/picosecond), and IPL
Langerhans cell Stratum spinosum Antigen presentation; immune surveillance; tolerance induction Reduced in photoaged skin; implicated in contact sensitisation and allergen response to topical treatments
Merkel cell Stratum basale Mechanoreception (light touch) Merkel cell carcinoma — rare but clinically important malignancy to recognise in skin assessment
Fibroblast Papillary and reticular dermis Collagen I/III, elastin, glycosaminoglycan synthesis; wound healing; extracellular matrix remodelling Primary effector of collagen-stimulating treatments (laser, RF, microneedling, retinoids); activity declines with age
Mast cell Papillary dermis; perivascular Histamine release (allergic/inflammatory response); IgE-mediated immunity; wound healing Post-treatment erythema and urticaria; increased mast cell density in rosacea — relevant when planning energy-based treatments
Macrophage Dermis; subcutaneous tissue Phagocytosis; inflammatory regulation; collagen remodelling direction Key mediator in inflammatory and proliferative phases of wound healing; implicated in foreign-body granuloma response to filler
Adipocyte Hypodermis; facial fat compartments Energy storage; thermal insulation; volumetric support; endocrine function Facial volume loss (lipoatrophy) is a primary driver of facial ageing; filler replaces deflated compartment volume; cryolipolysis and deoxycholic acid target excess submental fat
Regional anatomy

Section 07

Regional variation — face, neck, and décolletage

The face, neck, and décolletage are distinct anatomical regions with significant variation in skin thickness, follicular density, glandular activity, epidermal turnover, and response to treatment. These differences have direct implications for treatment selection, dosing, and expected outcomes.

Face
Skin thicknessVariable. Thickest over the cheeks and forehead (1–2 mm dermal), thinnest over the eyelids (~0.5 mm total).
Sebaceous densityHigh — particularly the T-zone (nose, forehead, central cheeks). Sebum production is highest in this region, contributing to acne predisposition and facilitating percutaneous absorption of lipophilic actives.
Epidermal turnoverModerate. Influenced by age, sun exposure, and topical retinoid use.
Vascular supplyDense. Abundant facial vascularity accounts for rapid healing post-procedure and also for the high-risk environment of dermal filler injection.
Treatment implicationsHighest tolerance for resurfacing treatments. Greatest collagen reserve and healing capacity relative to the neck and décolletage. Most established normative data for energy device parameters.
Neck
Skin thicknessThinner than facial skin. Dermis is less robust and contains fewer adnexal structures (hair follicles, sebaceous glands) — these are essential for re-epithelialisation after ablative treatments.
Sebaceous densityLow. Fewer sebaceous glands and follicles means the neck has a reduced reservoir for keratinocyte migration during healing — prolonging recovery and increasing scar risk with aggressive resurfacing.
Epidermal turnoverSlower than facial skin. Compounded by frequent UV exposure in an area often neglected in sun protection routines.
Treatment implicationsMust be treated with significantly reduced laser fluences, RF densities, and peel concentrations relative to the face. Neck skin requires 30–50% reduction in treatment parameters in most protocols. High risk of post-inflammatory dyspigmentation and prolonged erythema with aggressive treatment.
Décolletage
Skin thicknessThin. Similar to the neck but with greater cumulative UV exposure in fair-skinned individuals, producing characteristic solar elastosis.
Sebaceous densityVery low. Minimal adnexal structures — the lowest healing reserve of the three regions. Extremely cautious resurfacing parameters required.
Epidermal turnoverSlowest of the three regions. Solar elastosis and dermal disorganisation are characteristic findings on histology.
Treatment implicationsThe highest risk zone for scarring with energy-based treatments. Non-ablative or very low-density fractional approaches are preferred. Photoprotection and topical retinoids are the mainstay of prevention and maintenance. Solar lentigines are a common and treatable presentation in this region (IPL, QS laser).
Clinical application — parameter adjustment by region

One of the most common errors in aesthetic medicine is applying facial treatment parameters to the neck and décolletage without adjustment. The standard rule in laser resurfacing is to reduce fluence by 30–40% for the neck and 40–50% for the décolletage relative to the facial settings used in the same treatment session. The biological basis for this adjustment is the reduced follicular density — fewer follicles means fewer keratinocyte stem cells available for epidermal regeneration, directly increasing the risk of delayed healing, prolonged erythema, and permanent textural change or hypertrophic scarring.

Section 08

Skin ageing — intrinsic and extrinsic

Skin ageing is the cumulative result of two distinct but overlapping processes: intrinsic (chronological) ageing, driven by genetic and biological clock mechanisms; and extrinsic ageing, driven primarily by UV radiation (photoageing) but also by pollution, smoking, sleep deprivation, and nutritional deficiency.

Feature Intrinsic ageing Extrinsic ageing (photoageing)
Epidermis Thinning; slowed turnover; reduced Langerhans cells; flattened rete ridges Variable thickness (acanthosis in early UV damage; atrophy later); keratinocyte atypia; loss of orderly maturation
Melanocytes Reduced melanocyte number; uneven pigment distribution Focal melanocyte hyperplasia; solar lentigines; pigmentary dyschromia; melasma exacerbation
DEJ Flattening of rete ridges; reduced surface area; weaker adhesion More pronounced flattening; subepidermal elastosis replaces DEJ integrity
Collagen Decreased synthesis (1% per year from age 20); increased type III proportion; reduced cross-linking Fragmentation by UV-induced matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs); solar elastosis — disorganised elastin accumulation in upper dermis
Elastin Reduced elastin content; loss of recoil Elastosis: abnormal, amorphous elastin accumulates in the papillary dermis (actinically damaged elastic tissue)
GAGs / HA Hyaluronic acid content declines; reduced water-binding capacity; skin dryness Further HA degradation; dermal hydration impaired
Vasculature Reduced capillary density; pallor; impaired thermoregulation Telangiectasia; capillary ectasia; erythema
Clinical appearance Fine lines; laxity; skin thinning; dullness Deep rhytids; dyspigmentation; telangiectasia; rough texture; actinic keratoses
Advanced note — photoageing mechanism (MMP pathway)

UV radiation (primarily UVA, which penetrates to the reticular dermis) activates cell surface receptors (EGF receptor, TNF receptor) in both keratinocytes and fibroblasts, initiating a signalling cascade that upregulates matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs) — particularly MMP-1 (collagenase), MMP-3 (stromelysin), and MMP-9 (gelatinase). These enzymes cleave and fragment existing collagen I fibres. Simultaneously, UV irradiation suppresses new procollagen synthesis. This dual mechanism — increased collagen degradation combined with reduced collagen production — is the molecular explanation for dermal collagen loss in photoageing. Retinoids, niacinamide, and vitamin C all counter aspects of this pathway, providing the mechanistic rationale for their use in both prevention and treatment of photoageing. (Kang et al., 2005; Fisher et al., 1996).

Reference index

All statements in this module are drawn from or consistent with the following peer-reviewed sources. This index is maintained as a living document and reviewed on each module update cycle. References marked * are considered primary sources for the relevant content area.

Learning Check

Test your understanding before moving on. Select the best answer for each question, then click Check Answers.

1. New keratinocytes are produced in which layer of the epidermis?

2. The primary cells responsible for synthesising collagen and elastin in the dermis are:

3. With age and chronic UV exposure, dermal collagen:

4. The Fitzpatrick scale classifies skin by:

5. Elevated transepidermal water loss (TEWL) is clinically significant because:

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