Lipase

TL;DR. This ingredient is used as a biocatalyst that breaks down oils and sebum-related lipids, supporting enzymatic cleansing, deodorizing, and mild exfoliation concepts. It can also be used as a processing aid in formulations involving fats and esters.

What does Lipase do in a cosmetic formula?

This ingredient is used as a biocatalyst that breaks down oils and sebum-related lipids, supporting enzymatic cleansing, deodorizing, and mild exfoliation concepts. It can also be used as a processing aid in formulations involving fats and esters.

Is Lipase clean?

From a clean beauty perspective, it is generally well accepted and does not carry common restricted-list friction. The main consideration is protein-related irritation or sensitization risk in powders, aerosols, or high-exposure professional handling.

Is Lipase sustainable?

This material is commonly produced by microbial fermentation, often using renewable feedstocks. It is readily biodegradable as a protein and does not raise persistence or bioaccumulation concerns.

Is Lipase COSMOS-approved?

It is generally compatible with COSMOS-natural and COSMOS-organic standards when sourced and processed under allowed biotechnology rules, with GMO and processing-aid controls depending on supplier documentation. Its fit with Green Chemistry is strong because small amounts catalyze specific reactions under mild conditions and the material biodegrades readily.

How does Lipase work chemically?

This ingredient is a folded protein catalyst that hydrolyzes ester bonds in triglycerides and related lipids, releasing fatty acids and glycerol-like fragments. Activity depends on temperature, water availability, substrate access, and pH, and it can be reduced by strong acids, high heat, oxidizers, or surfactant systems that denature proteins.

Last updated 2026-05-13