Literature DB >> 32686215

Evolution of ischemia and neovascularization in a murine model of full thickness human wound healing.

Aos S Karim1, Aiping Liu1, Christie Lin2,3, Adam J Uselmann2,3, Kevin W Eliceiri2,3,4, Matthew E Brown1, Angela L F Gibson1.   

Abstract

Translation of wound healing research is limited by the lack of an appropriate animal model, due to the anatomic and wound healing differences in animals and humans. Here, we characterize healing of grafted, full-thickness human skin in an in vivo model of wound healing. Full-thickness human skin, obtained from reconstructive operations, was grafted onto the dorsal flank of NOD.Cg-KitW41J Tyr + Prkdcscid Il2rgtm1Wjl /ThomJ mice. The xenografts were harvested 1 to 12 weeks after grafting, and histologic analyses were completed for viability, neovascularization, and hypoxia. Visual inspection of the xenograft shows drying and sloughing of the epidermis starting at week four. By week 12, the xenograft appears healed but has lost 63.05 ± 0.24% of the initial graft size. There is histologic evidence of epidermolysis as early as 2 weeks, which progresses until week 4, when new epidermis appears from the wound edges. Epidermal regeneration is complete by week 12, although the epidermis appears hypertrophied. An initial increase of infiltrating immune mouse cells into the xenograft normalizes to baseline 6 months after grafting. Neovascularization, as evidenced by positive staining for the proteins human CD31 and alpha smooth muscle actin, is present as early as 2 weeks after grafting at the interface between the xenograft and the mouse tissue. CD31 and alpha smooth muscle actin staining increased throughout the xenograft over the 12 weeks, leading to greater viability of the tissue. Likewise, there is increased Hypoxia Inducible Factor 1-alpha expression at the interface of viable and nonviable tissue, which suggest a hypoxia-driven process causing early graft loss. These findings illustrate human skin wound healing in an ischemic environment, providing a timeline for use of full thickness human skin after grafting in a murine model to study mechanisms underlying human skin wound healing.
© 2020 The Wound Healing Society.

Entities:  

Year:  2020        PMID: 32686215     DOI: 10.1111/wrr.12847

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Wound Repair Regen        ISSN: 1067-1927            Impact factor:   3.617


  2 in total

1.  Accelerated complete human skin architecture restoration after wounding by nanogenerator-driven electrostimulation.

Authors:  Aiping Liu; Yin Long; Jun Li; Long Gu; Aos Karim; Xudong Wang; Angela L F Gibson
Journal:  J Nanobiotechnology       Date:  2021-09-20       Impact factor: 10.435

2.  PDGF-BB-derived supramolecular hydrogel for promoting skin wound healing.

Authors:  Ke Jian; Chenghao Yang; Tingting Li; Xia Wu; Jun Shen; Jiaying Wei; Zhimou Yang; Dan Yuan; Mingyi Zhao; Junfeng Shi
Journal:  J Nanobiotechnology       Date:  2022-04-26       Impact factor: 9.429

  2 in total

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