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Beiersdorf, the German skincare company behind NIVEA, Eucerin, and La Prairie, has announced a strategic investment and partnership with Vincere Biosciences, a longevity biotech startup based in Cambridge, MA. The collaboration aims to bring cutting-edge mitochondrial rejuvenation science into skincare, marking a notable step toward consumer products that don’t just soften the appearance of aging, but actively target its root biological causes.
And perhaps most importantly: this isn’t a change in direction for Vincere. It’s a strategic expansion, a dual-track approach that allows early-stage longevity companies to pursue both long-term therapies and faster-to-market consumer products.
Vincere is developing small-molecule compounds that enhance mitophagy, the process by which cells clear out damaged or dysfunctional mitochondria. This process slows with age, contributing to energy decline, oxidative stress, and cellular dysfunction. In the brain, impaired mitophagy is implicated in neurodegenerative diseases like Parkinson’s, Vincere’s lead indication.
Their lead compounds inhibit USP30, an enzyme that blocks mitophagy by removing the cell’s “destroy me” tags from defective mitochondria. By suppressing USP30, Vincere’s molecules restore the cell’s natural cleanup process, something that benefits not just neurons, but also skin cells, which rely on mitochondrial health to maintain structure, collagen, and repair capacity.
Beiersdorf’s interest in cellular aging isn't new. The company has a long-standing track record in skin biology innovation, including work with Coenzyme Q10 since the 1990s. But this partnership marks a leap from antioxidants to mechanism-driven interventions that directly target aging at its source.
Working with Vincere, Beiersdorf plans to explore whether topical applications of USP30 inhibitors can:
In essence, this is a bid to move beyond “anti-aging” as a marketing term and deliver it as a real biological function.
This dual-track development model enables Vincere to operate on two fronts:
This second path offers more than a cosmetic boost. It creates a commercial runway to:
Beiersdorf invested alongside other backers, including Draper Associates, Portal Innovations, LongGame Ventures, quadraScope Ventures, and FreeMind Group, highlighting growing interest in biotech–skincare convergence.
That’s crucial for diseases like Parkinson’s, which require large, multi-year trials and substantial capital, two factors that have made clinical longevity biotech notoriously hard to finance.
Vincere isn’t the first longevity biotech company to take this route and Beiersdorf isn’t new to it either.
In April 2024, Beiersdorf also announced a multi-year partnership with Rubedo Life Sciences, a company developing both senolytic therapeutics and skincare applications to target cellular senescence, another core hallmark of aging. Like Vincere, Rubedo runs a dual program: one track aimed at bringing advanced therapeutics through FDA pathways, and another focused on topical products that offer earlier commercialization opportunities.
This dual approach isn’t just about faster revenue, it’s also a way to reduce risk for the company overall:
And it makes companies more attractive to investors, showing a clear path to sustainability while long, capital-intensive trials continue
That’s especially important for companies like Vincere, whose lead indication, Parkinson’s disease, requires large, multi-year clinical trials that are notoriously expensive and slow. Many promising therapeutics in the longevity space have died on the vine due to funding gaps and long timelines. Dual-path strategies like this one could help change that.
There’s also a biological rationale: many interventions that target aging at the cellular level (mitophagy, senescence, inflammation) visibly improve skin and hair early in animal models. Skin is often the first organ to show signs of biological rejuvenation.
In short, skin may be the proving ground and the revenue engine for longevity science. We expect future investors to look more favorably on platforms that can commercialize early while building toward long-term healthspan interventions. Skincare might be the training wheels for cellular rejuvenation.