Regeneration of Skin and Cornea by Tissue Engineering
Keratinocytes
Fibrin
Tissue Engineering
Reconstructed skin
Fibrin gel
Epithelial Cells
Stem cells
Fibroblasts
Keratin 19
Culture Media
Skin substitute
Cornea
Corneal epithelial cell
Animals
Humans
Regeneration
Tissue engineering
Rabbits
Epidermis
Gels
Cells, Cultured
Human
Skin
DOI:
10.1007/978-1-59745-060-7_15
Publication Date:
2008-12-16T13:31:09Z
AUTHORS (6)
ABSTRACT
Progress in tissue engineering has led to the development of technologies allowing the reconstruction of autologous tissues from the patient's own cells. Thus, tissue-engineered epithelial substitutes produced from cultured skin epithelial cells undergo long-term regeneration after grafting, indicating that functional stem cells were preserved during culture and following grafting. However, these cultured epithelial sheets reconstruct only the upper layer of the skin and lack the mechanical properties associated to the connective tissue of the dermis. We have designed a reconstructed skin entirely made from human cutaneous cells comprising both the dermis and the epidermis, as well as a well-organized basement membrane by a method named the self-assembly approach. In this chapter, protocols to generate reconstructed skin and corneal epithelium suitable for grafting are described in details. The methods include extraction and culture of human skin keratinocytes, human skin fibroblasts as well as rabbit and human corneal epithelial cells, and a complete description of the skin reconstructed by the self-assembly approach and of corneal epithelium reconstructed over a fibrin gel.
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