Improving Cutaneous Wound Healing in Diabetic Mice Using Naturally Derived Tissue-Engineered Biological Dressings Produced under Serum-Free Conditions.
Meryem SafoineCaroline PaquetteGabrielle-Maude GingrasJulie FradettePublished in: Stem cells international (2024)
Long-term diabetes often leads to chronic wounds refractory to treatment. Cell-based therapies are actively investigated to enhance cutaneous healing. Various cell types are available to produce biological dressings, such as adipose-derived stem/stromal cells (ASCs), an attractive cell source considering their abundancy, accessibility, and therapeutic secretome. In this study, we produced human ASC-based dressings under a serum-free culture system using the self-assembly approach of tissue engineering. The dressings were applied every 4 days to full-thickness 8-mm splinted skin wounds created on the back of polygenic diabetic NONcNZO10/LtJ mice and streptozotocin-induced diabetic K14-H2B-GFP mice. Global wound closure kinetics evaluated macroscopically showed accelerated wound closure in both murine models, especially for NONcNZO10/LtJ; the treated group reaching 98.7% ± 2.3% global closure compared to 76.4% ± 11.8% for the untreated group on day 20 ( p =0.0002). Histological analyses revealed that treated wounds exhibited healed skin of better quality with a well-differentiated epidermis and a more organized, homogeneous, and 1.6-fold thicker granulation tissue. Neovascularization, assessed by CD31 labeling, was 2.5-fold higher for the NONcNZO10/LtJ treated wounds. We thus describe the beneficial impact on wound healing of biologically active ASC-based dressings produced under an entirely serum-free production system facilitating clinical translation.
Keyphrases
- wound healing
- single cell
- cell therapy
- type diabetes
- cardiovascular disease
- tissue engineering
- endothelial cells
- high fat diet
- high fat diet induced
- adipose tissue
- diabetic retinopathy
- nlrp inflammasome
- optical coherence tomography
- mesenchymal stem cells
- high resolution
- oxidative stress
- quality improvement
- skeletal muscle
- mass spectrometry
- soft tissue
- wild type
- induced pluripotent stem cells