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Human cultured epidermis accelerates wound healing regardless of its viability in a diabetic mouse model

Allogeneic cultured epidermis (allo-CE) is a cultured keratinocyte sheet manufactured from donor cells and promotes wound healing when used in deep dermal burns, donor sites, and chronic ulcers and serves as a wound dressing. Allo-CE is usually cryopreserved to be ready to use. However, the cryopres...

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Autores principales: Sakamoto, Michiharu, Ogino, Shuichi, Shimizu, Yoshihiro, Inoie, Masukazu, Lee, Sunghee, Yamanaka, Hiroki, Tsuge, Itaru, Saito, Susumu, Morimoto, Naoki
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7442243/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32822395
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0237985
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author Sakamoto, Michiharu
Ogino, Shuichi
Shimizu, Yoshihiro
Inoie, Masukazu
Lee, Sunghee
Yamanaka, Hiroki
Tsuge, Itaru
Saito, Susumu
Morimoto, Naoki
author_facet Sakamoto, Michiharu
Ogino, Shuichi
Shimizu, Yoshihiro
Inoie, Masukazu
Lee, Sunghee
Yamanaka, Hiroki
Tsuge, Itaru
Saito, Susumu
Morimoto, Naoki
author_sort Sakamoto, Michiharu
collection PubMed
description Allogeneic cultured epidermis (allo-CE) is a cultured keratinocyte sheet manufactured from donor cells and promotes wound healing when used in deep dermal burns, donor sites, and chronic ulcers and serves as a wound dressing. Allo-CE is usually cryopreserved to be ready to use. However, the cryopreservation procedure will damage the cell viability, and the influence of Allo-CE, according to its viability or wound healing process, has not been evaluated sufficiently. In this study, we aimed to prove the influence of keratinocyte viability contained in allo-CEs on wound healing. We prepared CEs with Green’s method using keratinocytes obtained from a polydactyly patient and then prepared four kinds of CEs with different cell viabilities [fresh, cryopreserved, frozen, and FT (freeze and thaw)]. The cell viabilities of fresh, cryopreserved, frozen, and FT CEs were 95.7%, 59.9%, 16.7%, and 0.0%, respectively. The four CEs had homogeneous characteristics, except for small gaps found in the FT sheet by transmission electron microscopy observation. The four CEs were applied on the full-thickness skin defect of diabetic mice (BKS.Cg-Dock 7(m) +/+ Lepr(db)/Jcl), and the wound area and neoepithelium length were evaluated on days 4, 7, and 14. As a result, FT CEs without viable cells similarly promoted epithelialization on days 4 and 7 (p<0.05) and accelerated wound closure on day 7 (p<0.01) as fresh CEs compared with the control group. In conclusion, the promoting effect of allo-CE on wound healing does not depend on cell viability. Lyophilized CEs may be a suitable wound dressing with a long storage period at room temperature.
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spelling pubmed-74422432020-08-26 Human cultured epidermis accelerates wound healing regardless of its viability in a diabetic mouse model Sakamoto, Michiharu Ogino, Shuichi Shimizu, Yoshihiro Inoie, Masukazu Lee, Sunghee Yamanaka, Hiroki Tsuge, Itaru Saito, Susumu Morimoto, Naoki PLoS One Research Article Allogeneic cultured epidermis (allo-CE) is a cultured keratinocyte sheet manufactured from donor cells and promotes wound healing when used in deep dermal burns, donor sites, and chronic ulcers and serves as a wound dressing. Allo-CE is usually cryopreserved to be ready to use. However, the cryopreservation procedure will damage the cell viability, and the influence of Allo-CE, according to its viability or wound healing process, has not been evaluated sufficiently. In this study, we aimed to prove the influence of keratinocyte viability contained in allo-CEs on wound healing. We prepared CEs with Green’s method using keratinocytes obtained from a polydactyly patient and then prepared four kinds of CEs with different cell viabilities [fresh, cryopreserved, frozen, and FT (freeze and thaw)]. The cell viabilities of fresh, cryopreserved, frozen, and FT CEs were 95.7%, 59.9%, 16.7%, and 0.0%, respectively. The four CEs had homogeneous characteristics, except for small gaps found in the FT sheet by transmission electron microscopy observation. The four CEs were applied on the full-thickness skin defect of diabetic mice (BKS.Cg-Dock 7(m) +/+ Lepr(db)/Jcl), and the wound area and neoepithelium length were evaluated on days 4, 7, and 14. As a result, FT CEs without viable cells similarly promoted epithelialization on days 4 and 7 (p<0.05) and accelerated wound closure on day 7 (p<0.01) as fresh CEs compared with the control group. In conclusion, the promoting effect of allo-CE on wound healing does not depend on cell viability. Lyophilized CEs may be a suitable wound dressing with a long storage period at room temperature. Public Library of Science 2020-08-21 /pmc/articles/PMC7442243/ /pubmed/32822395 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0237985 Text en © 2020 Sakamoto et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Sakamoto, Michiharu
Ogino, Shuichi
Shimizu, Yoshihiro
Inoie, Masukazu
Lee, Sunghee
Yamanaka, Hiroki
Tsuge, Itaru
Saito, Susumu
Morimoto, Naoki
Human cultured epidermis accelerates wound healing regardless of its viability in a diabetic mouse model
title Human cultured epidermis accelerates wound healing regardless of its viability in a diabetic mouse model
title_full Human cultured epidermis accelerates wound healing regardless of its viability in a diabetic mouse model
title_fullStr Human cultured epidermis accelerates wound healing regardless of its viability in a diabetic mouse model
title_full_unstemmed Human cultured epidermis accelerates wound healing regardless of its viability in a diabetic mouse model
title_short Human cultured epidermis accelerates wound healing regardless of its viability in a diabetic mouse model
title_sort human cultured epidermis accelerates wound healing regardless of its viability in a diabetic mouse model
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7442243/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32822395
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0237985
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