4.5 Article

Establishment of an In Vitro Scab Model for Investigating Different Phases of Wound Healing

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BIOENGINEERING-BASEL
卷 9, 期 5, 页码 -

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MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/bioengineering9050191

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Chronic wounds are a significant problem in clinical work, but there is currently a lack of suitable model systems for studying wound healing. This study successfully established an in vitro scab model that can mimic the interaction between blood cells and skin cells during the early phases of wound healing.
Chronic wounds are a serious problem in clinical work and a heavy burden for individuals and society. In order to develop novel therapies, adequate model systems for the investigation of wound healing are required. Although in past years different in vitro and in vitro wound healing models have been established, a true human-like model does still not exist. Animal models are limited in their use due to species-specific differences in the skin, a lengthy manufacturing process, experimental costs, and ethical concerns. Both 2D and 3D in vitro models are usually comprised of only one or two skin cell types and fail to capture the reaction between blood cells and skin cells. Thus, our aim was to develop an in vitro scab model to investigate early reactions in the wound healing process. The here established scab model is comprised of HaCaT cells and freshly collected blood from healthy volunteers. The generated scabs were stably cultured for more than 2 weeks. TGF-beta signaling is well known to regulate the early phases of wound healing. All three TGF-beta isoforms and target genes involved in extracellular matrix composition and degradation were expressed in the in vitro scabs. To validate the in vitro scab model, the effects of either additional stimulation or the inhibition of the TGF-beta signaling pathway were investigated. Exogenous application of TGF-beta 1 stimulated matrix remodeling, which loosened the structure of the in vitro scabs with time, also induced expression of the inhibitory Smad7. Inhibition of the endogenous TGF-beta signaling, on the contrary, resulted in a rapid condensation and degranulation of the in vitro scabs. In summary, the here established in vitro scab model can be used to analyze the first phases of wound healing where blood and skin cells interact, as it is viable and responsive for more than 2 weeks.

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