Sierra-Sánchez Álvaro, Kim Kevin H, Blasco-Morente Gonzalo, Arias-Santiago Salvador
Cell Production and Tissue Engineering Unit, Virgen de las Nieves University Hospital, Andalusian Network of Design and Translation of Advanced Therapies, Granada, Spain.
Biosanitary Institute of Granada (ibs.GRANADA), Granada, Spain.
NPJ Regen Med. 2021 Jun 17;6(1):35. doi: 10.1038/s41536-021-00144-0.
Wound healing is an important function of skin; however, after significant skin injury (burns) or in certain dermatological pathologies (chronic wounds), this important process can be deregulated or lost, resulting in severe complications. To avoid these, studies have focused on developing tissue-engineered skin substitutes (TESSs), which attempt to replace and regenerate the damaged skin. Autologous cultured epithelial substitutes (CESs) constituted of keratinocytes, allogeneic cultured dermal substitutes (CDSs) composed of biomaterials and fibroblasts and autologous composite skin substitutes (CSSs) comprised of biomaterials, keratinocytes and fibroblasts, have been the most studied clinical TESSs, reporting positive results for different pathological conditions. However, researchers' purpose is to develop TESSs that resemble in a better way the human skin and its wound healing process. For this reason, they have also evaluated at preclinical level the incorporation of other human cell types such as melanocytes, Merkel and Langerhans cells, skin stem cells (SSCs), induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) or mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs). Among these, MSCs have been also reported in clinical studies with hopeful results. Future perspectives in the field of human-TESSs are focused on improving in vivo animal models, incorporating immune cells, designing specific niches inside the biomaterials to increase stem cell potential and developing three-dimensional bioprinting strategies, with the final purpose of increasing patient's health care. In this review we summarize the use of different human cell populations for preclinical and clinical TESSs under research, remarking their strengths and limitations and discuss the future perspectives, which could be useful for wound healing purposes.
伤口愈合是皮肤的一项重要功能;然而,在严重皮肤损伤(烧伤)后或某些皮肤病学病理状况(慢性伤口)下,这一重要过程可能会失调或丧失,从而导致严重并发症。为避免这些情况,研究集中于开发组织工程皮肤替代物(TESSs),其试图替代并再生受损皮肤。由角质形成细胞构成的自体培养上皮替代物(CESs)、由生物材料和成纤维细胞组成的同种异体培养真皮替代物(CDSs)以及由生物材料、角质形成细胞和成纤维细胞组成的自体复合皮肤替代物(CSSs),是研究最多的临床TESSs,在不同病理状况下均报告了积极结果。然而,研究人员的目的是开发更接近人类皮肤及其伤口愈合过程的TESSs。因此,他们还在临床前水平评估了其他人类细胞类型的掺入,如黑素细胞、默克尔细胞和朗格汉斯细胞、皮肤干细胞(SSCs)、诱导多能干细胞(iPSCs)或间充质干细胞(MSCs)。其中,MSCs在临床研究中也有报道,结果令人期待。人类TESSs领域的未来展望集中于改进体内动物模型、掺入免疫细胞、在生物材料内部设计特定微环境以提高干细胞潜能以及开发三维生物打印策略,最终目的是改善患者的医疗保健。在本综述中,我们总结了不同人类细胞群体在临床前和临床研究中用于TESSs的情况,指出其优势和局限性,并讨论未来展望,这可能对伤口愈合目的有用。