4.7 Article

Skin Wound Healing of the Adult Newt, Cynops pyrrhogaster: A Unique Re-Epithelialization and Scarless Model

Journal

BIOMEDICINES
Volume 9, Issue 12, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/biomedicines9121892

Keywords

newt; skin regeneration; re-epithelialization; scarless; color pattern

Funding

  1. Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology [221S0002]
  2. Japan Society for the Promotion of Science [18H04061]
  3. Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research [18H04061] Funding Source: KAKEN

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The study on adult newts reveals that their skin can achieve scarless regeneration through unique processes, making them an ideal model for research on skin wound healing and regeneration in humans.
In surgical and cosmetic studies, scarless regeneration is an ideal method to heal skin wounds. To study the technologies that enable scarless skin wound healing in medicine, animal models are useful. However, four-limbed vertebrates, including humans, generally lose their competency of scarless regeneration as they transit to their terrestrial life-stages through metamorphosis, hatching or birth. Therefore, animals that serve as a model for postnatal humans must be an exception to this rule, such as the newt. Here, we evaluated the adult newt in detail for the first time. Using a Japanese fire-bellied newt, Cynops pyrrhogaster, we excised the full-thickness skin at various locations on the body, and surveyed their re-epithelialization, granulation or dermal fibrosis, and recovery of texture and appendages as well as color (hue, tone and pattern) for more than two years. We found that the skin of adult newts eventually regenerated exceptionally well through unique processes of re-epithelialization and the absence of fibrotic scar formation, except for the dorsal-lateral to ventral skin whose unique color patterns never recovered. Color pattern is species-specific. Consequently, the adult C. pyrrhogaster provides an ideal model system for studies aimed at perfect skin wound healing and regeneration in postnatal humans.

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