| Literature DB >> 29255480 |
Saurabh Dixit1,2, Dieudonné R Baganizi1, Rajnish Sahu1, Ejowke Dosunmu1, Atul Chaudhari1, Komal Vig1, Shreekumar R Pillai1, Shree R Singh1, Vida A Dennis1.
Abstract
The repair or replacement of damaged skins is still an important, challenging public health problem. Immune acceptance and long-term survival of skin grafts represent the major problem to overcome in grafting given that in most situations autografts cannot be used. The emergence of artificial skin substitutes provides alternative treatment with the capacity to reduce the dependency on the increasing demand of cadaver skin grafts. Over the years, considerable research efforts have focused on strategies for skin repair or permanent skin graft transplantations. Available skin substitutes include pre- or post-transplantation treatments of donor cells, stem cell-based therapies, and skin equivalents composed of bio-engineered acellular or cellular skin substitutes. However, skin substitutes are still prone to immunological rejection, and as such, there is currently no skin substitute available to overcome this phenomenon. This review focuses on the mechanisms of skin rejection and tolerance induction and outlines in detail current available strategies and alternatives that may allow achieving full-thickness skin replacement and repair.Entities:
Keywords: Biomaterial; Immune rejection; Scaffolds; Skin allograft; Skin substitutes; Skin tissue engineering; Stem cells
Year: 2017 PMID: 29255480 PMCID: PMC5729423 DOI: 10.1186/s13036-017-0089-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Biol Eng ISSN: 1754-1611 Impact factor: 4.355
Fig. 1Allorecognition pathways: Direct pathway is the process whereby the donor’s MHC molecules on APCs is recognized by the TCRs of recipient’s T cells. Indirect pathway recognizes the processed peptide presented by recipient’s MHC on APCs. Semi-direct pathway is where T cell activation occurs by transfer of the donor’s MHC onto the recipient’s APCs
Fig. 2Bioengineered skin substitutes models. Tissue-engineered skin bio-constructs are either acellular or cellular and are composed of epidermal and/or dermal equivalents most often enclosed into a matrix scaffold of biomaterials
Some current commercially available bio-engineered skin substitutes
| Type | Brand | Components | Indication | Permanent Cover | References | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Scaffold Material | Scaffold Source | Cell Component | Cell Source | |||||
| Epidermal Substitutes | Bioseed® | Fibrin sealant | Allogeneic | Keratinocytes (cultured) | Autologous | Wound treatment | Yes | [ |
| Laserskin® | Benzyl-esterified Hyaluronan derivative | Recombinant | Keratinocytes / Fibroblasts (cultured) | Autologous/ | Regeneration and skin resurfacing for Burn wounds & Chronic full thickness ulcers | Yes | [ | |
| MySkin™ | Silicone layer | Synthetic | Keratinocytes (cultured) | Autologous | Neuropathic, pressure & Diabetic foot ulcers | Yes | [ | |
| Dermal/Epidermal Substitutes | Apligraf® | Type I Collagen | Bovine | Keratinocytes and fibroblasts (cultured) | Allogeneic | Partial & Full thickness burns, chronic wounds, Leg & Foot ulcers | No | [ |
| OrCel™ | Type I Collagen sponge | Bovine | Keratinocytes and fibroblasts (cultured) | Allogeneic | Healing of autograft donor sites, Reconstruction of recessive dystrophic epidermolysis bullosa | No | [ | |
| EZ Derm® | Aldehyde-cross linked Collagen | Porcine | Dressing for partial thickness burns | No | [ | |||
| PolyActive | Polyethylene oxide terephthalate & Polybutylene terephthalate (PEO/PBT) | Synthetic | Keratinocytes and fibroblasts (cultured) | Autologous | Dressing for partial thickness wounds | No | [ | |
| GammaGraft™ | Cryopreserved Collagen | Cadaveric & Allogeneic | Skin graft for burns, | No | [ | |||
| MyDerm™ | Fibrin | Autologous | Keratinocytes and fibroblasts (cultured) | Autologous | Coverage of full thickness skin loss | Yes | [ | |
| Dermal Substitutes | Integra® | Type I Collagen & Chondroitin-6- Sulfate | Bovine | Partial and full thickness wound, burns, Chronic ulcers | No (Semi) | [ | ||
| PriMatrix® | Type I and III Collagen | Bovine | Coverage of complex wounds | Yes | [ | |||
| Alloderm® | Lyophilized Collagen | Cadaveric & Allogeneic | Resurfacing of full thickness burn wounds & Wound cover | Yes | [ | |||
| Oasis® | Type I, III and V Collagen | Porcine | Wound covering | Yes | [ | |||
| GraftJacket® | Cryopreserved Collagen | Cadaveric & Allogeneic | Various wound repair | Yes | [ | |||
| Permacol® | Collagen and Elastin | Porcine | Skin dressing | Yes | [ | |||
| MatriDerm® | Type I Collagen & Elastin | Bovine | Regeneration of full thickness burn & chronic wounds | Yes | [ | |||
| Trancyte® | Type I Collagen, Nylon mesh, Silicon film | Porcine & Synthetic | Neonatal fibroblasts (cultured) | Allogeneic | Wound dressing for partial thickness burns | Yes | [ | |
| Biobrane® | Type I Collagen, Nylon filament, Silicon film | Porcine & Synthetic | Regeneration & Wound dressing for Partial & Full thickness wounds and Chronic ulcers | Yes | [ | |||
| Dermagraft® | Polyglycolic acid/Poly(lactic acid) (PGA/PLA) & ECM | Synthetic & Allogeneic | Neonatal fibroblasts (cultured) | Allogeneic | Covering for Burns & Chronic wounds & Chronic diabetic foot ulcers | Yes | [ | |
| Hyalograft 3D | Hyaluronan | Allogeneic | Fibroblasts (cultured) | Autologous | Deep burns & Foot ulcer treatment | Yes | [ | |
| Hyalomatrix® | Hyaluronan (HYAFF) on silicone layer | Allogeneic & Synthetic | Wound regeneration in deep burns & chronic wounds | No (Semi) | [ | |||
| TissueMend™ | Collagen | Allogeneic | Tissue remodeling for tendon and ligament repair | Yes | [ | |||
Fig. 3Strategies to develop immune compatible natural skins substitutes. In the model we discuss the strategy of development of immuno compatible skin by (a) Stem cell banking on the basis of human leucocyte antigen of adult stem cells and umbilical cord. b Remodeling the stem cells and (c) Introducing pluripotency and differentiating cells in to different cell lineage (d) Development of three-dimension structure (e) Full length lab grown perfect skin