| Literature DB >> 32014004 |
Tingting Weng1, Pan Wu1, Wei Zhang1, Yurong Zheng2, Qiong Li1, Ronghua Jin1, Haojiao Chen1, Chuangang You1, Songxue Guo3, Chunmao Han1, Xingang Wang4.
Abstract
Tissue-engineered skin (TES), as an analogue of native skin, is promising for wound repair and regeneration. However, a major drawback of TES products is a lack of skin appendages and nerves to enhance skin healing, structural integrity and skin vitality. Skin appendages and nerves are important constituents for fully functional skin. To date, many studies have yielded remarkable results in the field of skin appendages reconstruction and nerve regeneration. However, patients often complain about a loss of skin sensation and even cutaneous chronic pain. Restoration of pain, temperature, and touch perceptions should now be a major challenge to solve in order to improve patients' quality of life. Current strategies to create skin appendages and sensory nerve regeneration are mainly based on different types of seeding cells, scaffold materials, bioactive factors and involved signaling pathways. This article provides a comprehensive overview of different strategies for, and advances in, skin appendages and sensory nerve regeneration, which is an important issue in the field of tissue engineering and regenerative medicine.Entities:
Keywords: Hair follicle; Neural regeneration; Regenerative medicine; Skin appendages; Tissue engineering
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32014004 PMCID: PMC6996190 DOI: 10.1186/s12967-020-02248-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Transl Med ISSN: 1479-5876 Impact factor: 5.531
Fig. 1Schematic representation of the skin structure
The structure of human skin and their functions
| Locations | Functions | References | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Epidermis | |||
| Melanocytes | Stratum basale | Production of melanosomes | [ |
| Merkel cells | Stratum basale | Sensor | [ |
| Keratinocytes | Stratum corneum Basement membrane | Secrete lipids, protease inhibitors, hydrolases, and antimicrobial peptides | [ |
| Langerhans cells | Stratum spinosum | Serving an immunologic role | [ |
| Dermoepidermal junction | Epidermal and dermal layers | Regulates adhesion, movement, and growth of keratinocytes and fibroblasts4 Provides structural support for epidermis | [ |
| Dermis | |||
| Vasculature | Superficial plexus: papillary and reticular dermis Deep plexus: reticular dermis and hypodermis | Supply oxygen and nutrients to skin | |
| Arrector pili muscle | Attach to the hair follicle below the sebaceous glands | Pull the hair follicle | [ |
| Arteries smooth muscle | Arterial wall | Perfusion blood | |
| Skeletal muscle | Face and anterolateral neck | Facilitate facial expression | |
| Nerves | Along arterioles and venules | Touch, pressure, temperature, itch, and pain sensation | [ |
| Skin appendages | |||
| Hair Follicle | Dermal layer of the skin | Form physical barrier, antibacterial, inhibit scar formation | [ |
| Eccrine sweat glands | Palms and soles | Regulate body temperature | [ |
| Apocrine sweat glands | Axillary and anogenital regions | Cause the characteristic smell of body | [ |
| Sebaceous glands | Hair follicle and the arrector pili muscle | Secrete sebum and lubricate, protect against microorganisms | [ |
| Hypodermis | Beneath the dermis and above the muscle | Insulate from the cold and violent trauma, provides buoyancy, storing energy | [ |
Fig. 2Schematic representation of tissue-engineered skin. Wound resident cells could be obtained from patient wounds. The common wound resident cells include keratinocytes, fibroblasts, vascular endothelial cells, adipose cells, nerve cells, etc. On the one hand, these cells can then be directly reprogrammed into epidermal cells in vitro. On the other hand, wound resident cells can also be genetically edited. The gene that can promote wound healing is introduced into cells to increase the secretion of cell bioactive factors. Finally, these specially treated cells can then be incorporated into a biomaterial scaffold and implanted back to the patient at the damaged tissue site
Methods for regeneration of skin appendages and nerves
| Scaffolding/materials | Cells | Results | References | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hair follicles | Integra dermal substitute (type I Collagen) | Epidermal and dermal cells from neonatal rats | Hairs can be seen as early as 11–15 days postgraft; high reproducibility of hair formation; hair filament shows a normal appearance | [ |
| Matrigel | Human-derived outer sheath keratinocyte and dermal papilla cells | Form a tube-like structure; develop into epidermal cyst-like cell spheres; cannot form intact hair follicles | [ | |
| 3D-bioprintering (type I collagen gel containing dermal fibroblasts (FBs), microfabricated plastic molds) | Hair papilla cells | Simulate the three-dimensional growth environment; successfully regenerated the skin tissue containing hair follicles Formation of microvascular vessels | [ | |
| Sebaceous glands | The transplantation of the bioengineered hair follicles | Embryonic skin-derived epithelial and mesenchymal cells | Develop histologically correct hair follicles; sebaceous glands show positive staining with oil red O | [ |
| Sweat glands | Scaffolding/materials-free | Heated SGCs co-cultured with BrdU/GFP-labelled MSCs | The MSCs had acquired the sweat gland cell phenotype | [ |
| 3D-bioprintering/Matrigel basement membrane matrix | SGCs | Simulate the tissue structure of the sweat gland in vivo | [ | |
| EGF-containing gelatine microspheres | SGCs | Develop Sweat gland-like structures | [ | |
| Skin nerves | Dermal Regeneration Template (collagen–chitosan dermal scaffold) | Schwann cells, skin-derived precursor stem cells, BMSCs, iPS cells | Promote nerve growth, accelerate nerve regeneration | [ |
Fig. 3Distribution of skin sensory nerves and receptors