| Literature DB >> 27599760 |
Julia Lange1, Frederik Weil1, Christoph Riegler2, Florian Groeber3, Silke Rebhan1, Szymon Kurdyn3, Miriam Alb1, Hermann Kneitz4, Götz Gelbrich2, Heike Walles3, Stephan Mielke5.
Abstract
Human artificial skin models are increasingly employed as non-animal test platforms for research and medical purposes. However, the overall histopathological quality of such models may vary significantly. Therefore, the effects of manufacturing protocols and donor sources on the quality of skin models built-up from fibroblasts and keratinocytes derived from juvenile foreskins is studied. Histo-morphological parameters such as epidermal thickness, number of epidermal cell layers, dermal thickness, dermo-epidermal adhesion and absence of cellular nuclei in the corneal layer are obtained and scored accordingly. In total, 144 full-thickness skin models derived from 16 different donors, built-up in triplicates using three different culture conditions were successfully generated. In univariate analysis both media and donor age affected the quality of skin models significantly. Both parameters remained statistically significant in multivariate analyses. Performing general linear model analyses we could show that individual medium-donor-interactions influence the quality. These observations suggest that the optimal choice of media may differ from donor to donor and coincides with findings where significant inter-individual variations of growth rates in keratinocytes and fibroblasts have been described. Thus, the consideration of individual medium-donor-interactions may improve the overall quality of human organ models thereby forming a reproducible test platform for sophisticated clinical research.Entities:
Keywords: Biomaterials; Cell culture; Tissue engineering; Translational medic
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27599760 DOI: 10.1002/biot.201600360
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biotechnol J ISSN: 1860-6768 Impact factor: 4.677