Litcius/Paper detail

Engineering edgeless human skin with enhanced biomechanical properties

Alberto Pappalardo, David Alvarez Cespedes, Shuyang Fang, Abigail R. Herschman, Eun Young Jeon, Kristin M. Myers, Jeffrey W. Kysar, Hasan Erbil Abaci

2023Science Advances27 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Despite the advancements in skin bioengineering, 3D skin constructs are still produced as flat tissues with open edges, disregarding the fully enclosed geometry of human skin. Therefore, they do not effectively cover anatomically complex body sites, e.g., hands. Here, we challenge the prevailing paradigm by engineering the skin as a fully enclosed 3D tissue that can be shaped after a body part and seamlessly transplanted as a biological clothing. Our wearable edgeless skin constructs (WESCs) show enhanced dermal extracellular matrix (ECM) deposition and mechanical properties compared to conventional constructs. WESCs display region-specific cell/ECM alignment, as well as physiologic anisotropic mechanical properties. WESCs replace the skin in full-thickness wounds of challenging body sites (e.g., mouse hindlimbs) with minimal suturing and shorter surgery time. This study provides a compelling technology that may substantially improve wound care and suggests that the recapitulation of the tissue macroanatomy can lead to enhanced biological function.

Topics & Concepts

Extracellular matrixHuman skinTissue engineeringSkin equivalentBiomedical engineeringArtificial skinComputer scienceAnatomyBiologyMedicineCell biologyKeratinocyteCell cultureGeneticsWound Healing and TreatmentsCellular Mechanics and Interactions3D Printing in Biomedical Research
Engineering edgeless human skin with enhanced biomechanical properties | Litcius