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Reversibly immortalized keratinocytes (iKera) facilitate re-epithelization and skin wound healing: Potential applications in cell-based skin tissue engineering

Authors :
Jiamin Zhong
Hao Wang
Ke Yang
Huifeng Wang
Chongwen Duan
Na Ni
Liqin An
Yetao Luo
Piao Zhao
Yannian Gou
Shiyan Sheng
Deyao Shi
Connie Chen
William Wagstaff
Bryce Hendren-Santiago
Rex C. Haydon
Hue H. Luu
Russell R. Reid
Sherwin H. Ho
Guillermo A. Ameer
Le Shen
Tong-Chuan He
Jiaming Fan
Source :
Bioactive Materials, Vol 9, Iss , Pp 523-540 (2022)
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
KeAi Communications Co., Ltd., 2022.

Abstract

Skin injury is repaired through a multi-phase wound healing process of tissue granulation and re-epithelialization. Any failure in the healing process may lead to chronic non-healing wounds or abnormal scar formation. Although significant progress has been made in developing novel scaffolds and/or cell-based therapeutic strategies to promote wound healing, effective management of large chronic skin wounds remains a clinical challenge. Keratinocytes are critical to re-epithelialization and wound healing. Here, we investigated whether exogenous keratinocytes, in combination with a citrate-based scaffold, enhanced skin wound healing. We first established reversibly immortalized mouse keratinocytes (iKera), and confirmed that the iKera cells expressed keratinocyte markers, and were responsive to UVB treatment, and were non-tumorigenic. In a proof-of-principle experiment, we demonstrated that iKera cells embedded in citrate-based scaffold PPCN provided more effective re-epithelialization and cutaneous wound healing than that of either PPCN or iKera cells alone, in a mouse skin wound model. Thus, these results demonstrate that iKera cells may serve as a valuable skin epithelial source when, combining with appropriate biocompatible scaffolds, to investigate cutaneous wound healing and skin regeneration.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
2452199X
Volume :
9
Issue :
523-540
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Bioactive Materials
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.92b4b28c82a4cf2aaf8540bb5bb80d1
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.bioactmat.2021.07.022