| Literature DB >> 29940954 |
T Martinello1, C Gomiero1, A Perazzi2, I Iacopetti2, F Gemignani2, G M DeBenedictis2, S Ferro1, M Zuin3, E Martines3, P Brun4, L Maccatrozzo1, K Chiers5, J H Spaas6, M Patruno7.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Skin wound healing includes a system of biological processes, collectively restoring the integrity of the skin after injury. Healing by second intention refers to repair of large and deep wounds where the tissue edges cannot be approximated and substantial scarring is often observed. The objective of this study was to evaluate the effects of mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) in second intention healing using a surgical wound model in sheep. MSCs are known to contribute to the inflammatory, proliferative, and remodeling phases of the skin regeneration process in rodent models, but data are lacking for large animal models. This study used three different approaches (clinical, histopathological, and molecular analysis) to assess the putative action of allogeneic MSCs at 15 and 42 days after lesion creation.Entities:
Keywords: Cell therapy; Mesenchymal stem cells; Regenerative medicine; Wound healing
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29940954 PMCID: PMC6019727 DOI: 10.1186/s12917-018-1527-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Vet Res ISSN: 1746-6148 Impact factor: 2.741
Skin-healing parameters scored in the experiment
| Parameter | Score |
|---|---|
| Presence of exudate | 1 absent |
| 2 small | |
| 3 moderate | |
| 4 abundant | |
| Color of exudate | 1 clear |
| 2 pink/red | |
| 3 brown | |
| 4 yellow | |
| 5 green | |
| Character of exudate | 1 serous |
| 2 serosanguineous | |
| 3 sanguineous | |
| 4 purulent + | |
| 5 purulent ++ | |
| 6 purulent +++ | |
| Gauze | 1 dry/clean |
| 2 dry/stained | |
| 3 moist | |
| 4 wet | |
| Hydration | 1 Normal |
| 2 Maceration + | |
| 3 Maceration ++ | |
| 4 Desiccation + | |
| 5 Desiccation ++ |
Fig. 1Macroscopic analysis and the percentage of days of healing. a Serial macroscopic images of the wound site at different time points after PB-MSCs and PBS treatment. Between day 21 and 28, a smaller wound diameter and higher wound closure rate was observed in PB-MSCs-treated wounds. b The panel represents the percentage of days of healing. The wound closure time of the PB-MSC treated wounds (30,05 days) was slightly faster respect than the PBS-treated group (31,80 days)
Fig. 2Re-epithelialization and skin contraction. a The percentage of re-epithelization. b Percentage of contraction after 7, 14, 21, 28 and 42 days of treatment. PB-MSCs-treated wounds trend is represented by black lane, while PBS control group is indicated in grey lane
Fig. 3Representative photomicrographs of PBS and PB-MSCs treated wounds (Hematoxylin-Eosin). Photomicrographs of PBS and PB-MSCs treated wounds analyzed at 15 and 42 days from treatments. The images show the presence of immature granulation tissue at 15 days, while mature connective tissue and developing cutaneous adnexa are present at 42 days. The lack of epidermis in representative image of PB-MSCs treated wounds at 42 days is an artefact. Scale bar 151,7 μm
Fig. 4Immunohistochemistry analysis. Percentage of positive staining for CD3, CD20, MHCII, KI67, vWF in PB-MSCs-treated wounds (black bars) and PBS control group (grey bars). Each graph represents the main ± SD of wound treated with PB-MSCs and saline solution PBS. Asterisk indicates significant differences between PB-MSCs group and PBS control group (p < 0.05)
Fig. 5Analyses of mRNA gene expression. mRNA expression of Col1α1 and hKER in PB-MSCs-treated wounds (black bars) and PBS control group (grey bars). Col1α1 and hKER were highly expressed in the treated wounds. Asterisk indicates significant differences between PB-MSCs and PBS control groups (p < 0.05)