The skin is the largest organ in the human body, and it is constantly exposed to environmental insults, such as bacteria, viruses, air/water pollution, sunrays (Rodrigues et al., 2019). Three layers compose the skin: the epidermis, the dermis, and the hypodermis (Debeer et al., 2013). The epidermis is the outer layer of the skin, and it is the first barrier that protects the organism from external elements. Keratinocytes, melanocytes, Langerhans cells, and Merkel cells, arranged in five cellular layers, compose the epidermis. The deepest layer of the epidermis, the stratum basale, is constantly producing new cells that differentiate and migrate to the most external layer, named as stratum corneum, where they lose their nucleus and merge. In the normal skin, the most external cells detach constantly, taking around 2 weeks from birth in the Stratum basale to their loss in the Stratum corneum. The dermis is below the Stratum basale and has several functions, such as to feed the epidermis, to