• J. Invest. Dermatol. · Aug 1998

    Characterization of epidermal wound healing in a human skin organ culture model: acceleration by transplanted keratinocytes.

    • I Moll, P Houdek, H Schmidt, and R Moll.
    • Department of Dermatology, Universitätskrankenhaus Eppendorf, University of Hamburg, Germany.
    • J. Invest. Dermatol. 1998 Aug 1;111(2):251-8.

    AbstractFew data are available on early regeneration of human epidermis in vivo. We have established a supravital skin organ culture model for epidermal wound healing by setting a central defect (3 mm diameter) in freshly excised skin specimens and culturing under air exposure. Re-epithelialization was followed for up to 7 d by histology and immunohistologic analysis of various markers for differentiation and proliferation. In 12 of 19 cases (63%; 5% fetal calf serum) or six of 21 cases (29%; 2% fetal calf serum), the wounds were re-epithelialized spontaneously after 7 d. After transplantation to the wounds of 1-2 x 10(6) dissociated allogenic cultured epidermal or about 1 x 10(6) autologous outer root sheath keratinocytes, 18 of 21 cases (86%; 5% fetal calf serum) or 17 of 21 cases (81%; 2% fetal calf serum) were healed within the same period. Histologically, early neoepithelium (3 d) was disordered after keratinocyte transplantation, whereas later (7 d) it had gained a more ordered stratification, exhibiting a thin discontinuous granular and a compact horny layer. At this stage, not only hyperproliferative (CK 6) but also, abundantly, maturation-associated cytokeratins (CK 1, CK 10) were detected immunohistochemically. Analyses of regenerated epidermis after transplantation of (i) keratinocytes labeled in vitro with BrdU and (ii) heterosexual keratinocytes by immunohistochemistry and fluorescence in situ hybridization for the Y chromosome, respectively, clearly showed that external keratinocytes are physically integrated into the regenerated epidermis and extendedly contribute to its formation. The data presented here demonstrate improvement and acceleration of epidermal re-epithelialization by transplantation of keratinocytes.

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