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Marrubium Vulgare Callus Extract
"Descrizione"
by Al222 (24830 pt)
2026-Feb-13 12:03

Marrubium vulgare callus extract: properties, uses, pros, cons, safety

Marrubium vulgare callus extract is an extract obtained from the callus (undifferentiated tissue) of Marrubium vulgare L. (family Lamiaceae; historical synonym Labiatae) grown in vitro under controlled conditions. In cosmetics it is mainly used as a skin conditioning ingredient, with a use profile aimed at supporting surface hydration, comfort, and skin sensoriality, with performance depending on the grade and the supplier’s standardization.

For more information:    White horehound


Definition

“Callus extract” means an extract obtained from plant biomass produced via cell/tissue culture (callus) followed by extraction with suitable solvents (typically water, glycols, or hydroalcoholic mixtures). Compared with a whole-plant extract, callus culture can enable more controllable production and reduced seasonality dependence; however, the metabolic profile may differ depending on culture medium, growth regulators, elicitors, and operating conditions.


Production process and key constituents

How it is produced (in brief)
Typical industrial production includes: starting sterile cultures from selected plant material, inducing and growing callus on nutrient media, optional modulation with regulators/elicitors to steer the metabolic profile, harvesting biomass, extraction with a cosmetically suitable solvent, filtration and standardization (solids, markers, chromatographic fingerprint), then stabilization/preservation depending on the carrier.

Key constituents (representative, by category)
Phenylpropanoids/phenylethanoids 

  • Verbascoside (acteoside)

  • Forsythoside B

  • Chlorogenic acid

Flavonoids 

  • Luteolin

  • Apigenin

Iridoid glycosides 

  • Aucubin

  • Catalpol

Phytosterols 

  • β-sitosterol

  • Campesterol

Polysaccharides 

  • Arabinogalactans

  • Pectins

Technical note. In Marrubium vulgare cell culture systems, phenylpropanoids (especially verbascoside) are frequently reported and, depending on conditions, flavonoids and iridoids may also be present; the final composition depends substantially on the supplier’s technology and marker standardization.


Main uses

Cosmetics
Typical use in leave-on products (serums, creams, light emulsions, gels) and, more rarely, in gentle rinse-off products where skin conditioning support and a “biotech-botanical” (cell culture) positioning are desired.

INCI functions
Skin conditioning agent. It is the mainstay of topical skin treatment as it has the function of restoring, increasing or improving skin tolerance to external factors, including melanocyte tolerance. The most important function of the conditioning agent is to prevent skin dehydration, but the subject is rather complex and involves emollients and humectants that can be added in the formulation.

Industrial use
Raw material for skincare positioned around “cell culture / biotech botanical,” often combined with humectants and emollients, depending on the available performance dossier.


Identification data and specifications

CharacteristicValueNote
INCI nameMarrubium vulgare callus extractCosmetic denomination
Botanical originMarrubium vulgare L.Callus (in vitro culture)
Botanical familyLamiaceaeSyn. Labiatae
CAS number84696-20-8 (generic)Often shared with other M. vulgare extracts
EC number (EINECS)283-638-4EU identifier
Preparation typecallus-derived extractCarrier/solvent depends on grade
Main functionskin conditioningIngredient-function framing
Variability notehighCulture, extraction, standardization dependent


Chemical-physical properties (indicative)

CharacteristicIndicative valueNote
Physical stateliquid or powderDepends on carrier and drying technology
Coloryellow-brown / amberVariable with phenolic fraction
Odormild herbal or neutralDepends on purification and carrier
Solubilityoften good in water/glycolsDepends on extraction solvent
pH (solutions)typically slightly acidic–neutralDepends on batch and standardization
Stabilitygood if protected from light/oxygenPhenolics are oxidation-sensitive
Critical pointspreservative compatibility and colorTo be verified in the finished formula

Functional role and mechanism of action

The action is mainly supportive and linked to a combination of: phenylpropanoid fraction (e.g., verbascoside) with a potential antioxidant contribution consistent with perceived “comfort,” polysaccharides with a possible film-forming/conditioning effect, and minor fractions (flavonoids/phytosterols) that may improve the feel of skin that is softer and “more balanced.” The actual effect depends on dose, vehicle, and grade quality/marker standardization.


Formulation compatibility

Generally compatible with O/W emulsions, aqueous gels, and serums. Key development points: color stability over time, compatibility with the preservative system (possible interactions with polyphenolic fractions), behavior in the presence of electrolytes/pH-sensitive polymers, and batch-to-batch sensorial repeatability.


Pros and cons

Pros
In vitro supply chain with potentially greater control versus seasonal extracts (supplier-dependent).
Good support ingredient for skin conditioning and comfort concepts.
Relatively easy integration into many aqueous bases and emulsions.

Cons
CAS/EC are often “generic” and not always discriminative: technical documentation (COA/TDS) is needed to identify the grade.
Marker and color variability if not well standardized.
Performance is tied to the supplier dossier quality and the actual marker content.


Safety, regulatory, and environmental aspects

Allergen.
Not typically a classic single fragrance allergen; as with many botanical extracts, irritation/sensitization remains possible in predisposed individuals. Assessment should be performed on the finished product and batch specification.

Contraindications (brief).
Use caution on highly reactive skin, especially at high leave-on dosages; prefer well-standardized grades and verify microbiological stability/preservation.


Formulation troubleshooting

Batch-to-batch color shifts or color change over time.
Action: request color/marker ranges from the supplier, use barrier packaging, evaluate compatible antioxidants/chelators.

Microbiological instability in high-aqueous formulas.
Action: recalibrate preservation, verify incoming batch microbial load, optimize process and plant hygiene.

Interactions with gelling agents/polymers.
Action: control final pH, test compatibility with the chosen polymer, evaluate order of addition.


Conclusion

Marrubium vulgare callus extract is a “cell culture” ingredient used in cosmetics for skin conditioning. Practical value depends on grade repeatability (marker standardization such as verbascoside and overall phenolic profile) and on correct formulation management of color, preservation, and compatibility with the matrix.

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