In vitro construction of scaffold-free bilayered tissue-engineered skin containing capillary networks

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Abstract

Many types of skin substitutes have been constructed using exogenous materials. Angiogenesis is an important factor for tissue-engineered skin constructs. In this study, we constructed a scaffold-free bilayered tissue-engineered skin containing a capillary network. First, we cocultured dermal fibroblasts with dermal microvascular endothelial cells at a ratio of 2: 1. A fibrous sheet was formed by the interactions between the fibroblasts and the endothelial cells, and capillary-like structures were observed after 20 days of coculture. Epithelial cells were then seeded on the fibrous sheet to assemble the bilayered tissue. HE staining showed that tissue-engineered skin exhibited a stratified epidermis after 7 days. Immunostaining showed that the epithelium promoted the formation of capillary-like structures. Transmission electron microscopy (TEM) analysis showed that the capillary-like structures were typical microblood vessels. ELISA demonstrated that vascularization was promoted by significant upregulation of vascularization associated growth factors due to interactions among the 3 types of cells in the bilayer, as compared to cocultures of fibroblast and endothelial cells and monocultures. © 2013 Yuan Liu et al.

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Liu, Y., Luo, H., Wang, X., Takemura, A., Fang, Y. R., Jin, Y., & Suwa, F. (2013). In vitro construction of scaffold-free bilayered tissue-engineered skin containing capillary networks. BioMed Research International, 2013. https://doi.org/10.1155/2013/561410

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