Litcius/Paper detail

Human skin explant model for the investigation of topical therapeutics

Jessica Neil, Marc B. Brown, Adrian C. Williams

2020Scientific Reports85 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The development of in vitro and ex vivo models to mimic human illness is important not only for scientific understanding and investigating therapeutic approaches but also to mitigate animal testing and bridge the inter-species translational gap. While in vitro models can facilitate high-throughput and cost-efficient evaluation of novel therapeutics, more complex ex vivo systems can better predict both desirable and adverse in vivo effects. Here we describe an ex vivo cultured human skin explant model in which we have characterized pathological tissue integrity, barrier function and metabolic stability over time. Our findings suggest that human skin can be successfully cultured for pharmacodynamic use up to and beyond 9 days without any adverse physiological consequence.

Topics & Concepts

Ex vivoIn vivoExplant cultureHuman skinIn vitroFunction (biology)MedicineComputational biologyBioinformaticsBiologyCell biologyBiotechnologyBiochemistryGeneticsDermatology and Skin DiseasesAdvancements in Transdermal Drug DeliveryPsoriasis: Treatment and Pathogenesis