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Optimization of an Ex-Vivo Human Skin/Vein Model for Long-Term Wound Healing Studies: Ground Preparatory Activities for the ‘Suture in Space’ Experiment Onboard the International Space Station

This study is preliminary to an experiment to be performed onboard the International Space Station (ISS) and on Earth to investigate how low gravity influences the healing of sutured human skin and vein wounds. Its objective was to ascertain whether these tissue explants could be maintained to be vi...

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Autores principales: Cialdai, Francesca, Bacci, Stefano, Zizi, Virginia, Norfini, Aleandro, Balsamo, Michele, Ciccone, Valerio, Morbidelli, Lucia, Calosi, Laura, Risaliti, Chiara, Vanhelden, Lore, Pantalone, Desirée, Bani, Daniele, Monici, Monica
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9693847/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36430601
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijms232214123
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author Cialdai, Francesca
Bacci, Stefano
Zizi, Virginia
Norfini, Aleandro
Balsamo, Michele
Ciccone, Valerio
Morbidelli, Lucia
Calosi, Laura
Risaliti, Chiara
Vanhelden, Lore
Pantalone, Desirée
Bani, Daniele
Monici, Monica
author_facet Cialdai, Francesca
Bacci, Stefano
Zizi, Virginia
Norfini, Aleandro
Balsamo, Michele
Ciccone, Valerio
Morbidelli, Lucia
Calosi, Laura
Risaliti, Chiara
Vanhelden, Lore
Pantalone, Desirée
Bani, Daniele
Monici, Monica
author_sort Cialdai, Francesca
collection PubMed
description This study is preliminary to an experiment to be performed onboard the International Space Station (ISS) and on Earth to investigate how low gravity influences the healing of sutured human skin and vein wounds. Its objective was to ascertain whether these tissue explants could be maintained to be viable ex vivo for long periods of time, mimicking the experimental conditions onboard the ISS. We developed an automated tissue culture chamber, reproducing and monitoring the physiological tensile forces over time, and a culture medium enriched with serelaxin (60 ng/mL) and (Zn(PipNONO)Cl) (28 ng/mL), known to extend viability of explanted organs for transplantation. The results show that the human skin and vein specimens remained viable for more than 4 weeks, with no substantial signs of damage in their tissues and cells. As a further clue about cell viability, some typical events associated with wound repair were observed in the tissue areas close to the wound, namely remodeling of collagen fibers in the papillary dermis and of elastic fibers in the vein wall, proliferation of keratinocyte stem cells, and expression of the endothelial functional markers eNOS and FGF-2. These findings validate the suitability of this new ex vivo organ culture system for wound healing studies, not only for the scheduled space experiment but also for applications on Earth, such as drug discovery purposes.
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spelling pubmed-96938472022-11-26 Optimization of an Ex-Vivo Human Skin/Vein Model for Long-Term Wound Healing Studies: Ground Preparatory Activities for the ‘Suture in Space’ Experiment Onboard the International Space Station Cialdai, Francesca Bacci, Stefano Zizi, Virginia Norfini, Aleandro Balsamo, Michele Ciccone, Valerio Morbidelli, Lucia Calosi, Laura Risaliti, Chiara Vanhelden, Lore Pantalone, Desirée Bani, Daniele Monici, Monica Int J Mol Sci Article This study is preliminary to an experiment to be performed onboard the International Space Station (ISS) and on Earth to investigate how low gravity influences the healing of sutured human skin and vein wounds. Its objective was to ascertain whether these tissue explants could be maintained to be viable ex vivo for long periods of time, mimicking the experimental conditions onboard the ISS. We developed an automated tissue culture chamber, reproducing and monitoring the physiological tensile forces over time, and a culture medium enriched with serelaxin (60 ng/mL) and (Zn(PipNONO)Cl) (28 ng/mL), known to extend viability of explanted organs for transplantation. The results show that the human skin and vein specimens remained viable for more than 4 weeks, with no substantial signs of damage in their tissues and cells. As a further clue about cell viability, some typical events associated with wound repair were observed in the tissue areas close to the wound, namely remodeling of collagen fibers in the papillary dermis and of elastic fibers in the vein wall, proliferation of keratinocyte stem cells, and expression of the endothelial functional markers eNOS and FGF-2. These findings validate the suitability of this new ex vivo organ culture system for wound healing studies, not only for the scheduled space experiment but also for applications on Earth, such as drug discovery purposes. MDPI 2022-11-16 /pmc/articles/PMC9693847/ /pubmed/36430601 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijms232214123 Text en © 2022 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Cialdai, Francesca
Bacci, Stefano
Zizi, Virginia
Norfini, Aleandro
Balsamo, Michele
Ciccone, Valerio
Morbidelli, Lucia
Calosi, Laura
Risaliti, Chiara
Vanhelden, Lore
Pantalone, Desirée
Bani, Daniele
Monici, Monica
Optimization of an Ex-Vivo Human Skin/Vein Model for Long-Term Wound Healing Studies: Ground Preparatory Activities for the ‘Suture in Space’ Experiment Onboard the International Space Station
title Optimization of an Ex-Vivo Human Skin/Vein Model for Long-Term Wound Healing Studies: Ground Preparatory Activities for the ‘Suture in Space’ Experiment Onboard the International Space Station
title_full Optimization of an Ex-Vivo Human Skin/Vein Model for Long-Term Wound Healing Studies: Ground Preparatory Activities for the ‘Suture in Space’ Experiment Onboard the International Space Station
title_fullStr Optimization of an Ex-Vivo Human Skin/Vein Model for Long-Term Wound Healing Studies: Ground Preparatory Activities for the ‘Suture in Space’ Experiment Onboard the International Space Station
title_full_unstemmed Optimization of an Ex-Vivo Human Skin/Vein Model for Long-Term Wound Healing Studies: Ground Preparatory Activities for the ‘Suture in Space’ Experiment Onboard the International Space Station
title_short Optimization of an Ex-Vivo Human Skin/Vein Model for Long-Term Wound Healing Studies: Ground Preparatory Activities for the ‘Suture in Space’ Experiment Onboard the International Space Station
title_sort optimization of an ex-vivo human skin/vein model for long-term wound healing studies: ground preparatory activities for the ‘suture in space’ experiment onboard the international space station
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9693847/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36430601
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijms232214123
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