| Literature DB >> 30009192 |
Steven T Boyce1,2, Andrea L Lalley2.
Abstract
Engineering of biologic skin substitutes has progressed over time from individual applications of skin cells, or biopolymer scaffolds, to combinations of cells and scaffolds for treatment, healing, and closure of acute and chronic skin wounds. Skin substitutes may be categorized into three groups: acellular scaffolds, temporary substitutes containing allogeneic skin cells, and permanent substitutes containing autologous skin cells. Combined use of acellular dermal substitutes with permanent skin substitutes containing autologous cells has been shown to provide definitive wound closure in burns involving greater than 90% of the total body surface area. These advances have contributed to reduced morbidity and mortality from both acute and chronic wounds but, to date, have failed to replace all of the structures and functions of the skin. Among the remaining deficiencies in cellular or biologic skin substitutes are hypopigmentation, absence of stable vascular and lymphatic networks, absence of hair follicles, sebaceous and sweat glands, and incomplete innervation. Correction of these deficiencies depends on regulation of biologic pathways of embryonic and fetal development to restore the full anatomy and physiology of uninjured skin. Elucidation and integration of developmental biology into future models of biologic skin substitutes promises to restore complete anatomy and physiology, and further reduce morbidity from skin wounds and scar. This article offers a review of recent advances in skin cell thrapies and discusses the future prospects in cutaneous regeneration.Entities:
Keywords: Burns; Cell therapy; Regenerative medicine; Scar; Skin substitute; Tissue engineering; Wound closure
Year: 2018 PMID: 30009192 PMCID: PMC6040609 DOI: 10.1186/s41038-017-0103-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Burns Trauma ISSN: 2321-3868
Comparisons of cell types in native, engineered and grafted skin (adapted from [99])
| Tissue type | Cell type or structure | Uninjured skin | Split-thickness skin graft | Engineered skin substitutes | Healed skin after grafting |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Epidermis | Keratinocytes | + | + | + | + |
| Hair follicle | + | − | − | − | |
| Sebocytes | + | − | − | − | |
| Sweat gland | + | − | − | − | |
| Melanocytes | + | ± | ± | ± | |
| Immune cells | + | + | − | + | |
| Nerve | + | + | − | ± | |
| Dermis | Fibroblasts | + | + | ± | + |
| Endothelial cells | + | + | − | + | |
| Extracellular matrix | + | ± | ± | ± | |
| Smooth muscle | + | + | − | ± | |
| Immune cells | + | + | − | + | |
| Nerve | + | + | − | ± |
Biologic skin substitutes, commercially available or in clinical trial (adapted from [100])
| Model [references] | Composition | Indications for use |
|---|---|---|
| Acellular skin substitutes | ||
| Integra Dermal Regeneration Template [ | Bovine collagen and chondroitin-sulfate coated with silicone | Burns, reconstructive surgery |
| AlloDerm [ | Decellularized human dermis | Repair or replacement of damaged or inadequate integumental tissue |
| MatriDerm [ | Bovine collagen and elastin | Burns, reconstructive surgery |
| Hyalomatrix [ | Derivatized hyaluronic acid | Partial- and full-thickness wounds |
| BioTemporizing Matrix [ | Bilaminate degradable polyurethane | Burns, reconstructive surgery |
| Temporary skin substitutes (dressings) | ||
| Cadaver allograft [ | Split-thickness skin from human donors, unfrozen or cryopreserved | Burns, reconstructive surgery |
| Porcine xenograft [ | Split-thickness porcine skin, cryopreserved or lyophilized | Burns, reconstructive surgery |
| Apligraf® [ | Allo hF in collagen gel plus stratified allo hK | Diabetic foot ulcers |
| StrataGraft® [ | Allo hF in collagen gel plus stratified allo hK | Partial-thickness burns |
| DermaGraft® [ | Allo hF on poly-galactin mesh | Diabetic foot ulcers |
| Permanent skin substitutes (grafts) | ||
| EpiCel® [ | Cultured auto hK multi-layer sheet | Full-thickness burns |
| ReCell® [ | Uncultured suspension of auto hK, delivered as a spray | Partial-thickness burns |
| Reconstructed skin [ | Auto hF on acellular scaffold of dermal extracelluar matrix, plus stratified auto hK | Full-thickness burns, venous and mixed ulcers |
| Autologous engineered skin substitute [ | Auto hF on a collagen-GAG scaffold, plus stratified auto hK | Full-thickness burns |
Fig. 1Clinical application of autologous engineered skin substitutes (ESS). a Histology of ESS shows a collagen-based polymer scaffold populated with cultured dermal fibroblasts and epidermal keratinocytes. Scale bar = 0.1 mm. b Surgical application of ESS on prepared wounds can be performed using forceps and secured with staples. c An African-American subject treated with ESS at 3 years of age shows predominant hypopigmentation. d The same subject at 14 years of age has persistent hypopigmentation but has required no reconstruction of the ESS site. Scales in centimeters
Fig. 2Correction of pigmentation with cultured autologous melanocytes in preclinical studies. a Human engineered skin substitutes (ESS) on immunodeficient mice showing hypopigmentation at 12 weeks after grafting. b Correction of hypopigmentation after 12 weeks by addition of isogeneic human melanocytes to ESS. Scales in centimeters. c Immunolabeling of epidermis with anti-cytokeratin (red) and the melanocyte-specific maker, tyrosinase-related protein-1 (TRP-1; negative). d Immunolabeling of ESS with added melanocytes shows epidermis (red), and TRP-1-positive melanocytes at the dermal-epidermal junction (white arrows) as in uninjured skin. Scale bars = 50 μm
Fig. 3Induction of hair follicles in vivo from neonatal dermal cells grafted to immunodeficient mice. a Human dermal fibroblasts and human epidermal keratinocytes express no hair. b Neonatal murine fibroblasts and human neonatal keratinocytes express chimeric hair at 4 weeks after grafting. Scales in cm. c Higher magnification showing density of regenerated hair is similar to that on positive control mice. Scale = 1 mm
Developmental pathways and regulatory factors for cutaneous phenotypes (adapted from [100])
| Cutaneous structures and phenotypes | Regulatory pathways and factors |
|---|---|
| Epidermal barrier | Ca2+ [ |
| Dermal-epidermal junction | Integrins [ |
| Hair follicle genesis and cycling | Wnt/β-catenin/DKK4/BMPs [ |
| Sebaceous glands | Rac1-Sox9-Lrig1 [ |
| Sweat glands | Wnt/β-catenin [ |
| Pigmentation | c-kit/SCF; [ |
| Sensory and motor innervation | c-jun [ |
| Cardiovascular system | Sox-7, -17, -18 [ |
| Subcutaneous fat | PPARγ [ |
EDA ectodysplasin, EDAR ectodysplasin receptor, TGFβ-1 transforming growth factor β-1, VEGF, vascular endothelial growth factor