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Transcriptional changes in human palate and skin healing.

Trevor R LeonardoLin ChenMegan E SchrementiJunhe ShiPhillip T MaruchaKimberly GlassLuisa A DiPietro
Published in: Wound repair and regeneration : official publication of the Wound Healing Society [and] the European Tissue Repair Society (2022)
Most human tissue injuries lead to the formation of a fibrous scar and result in the loss of functional tissue. One adult tissue that exhibits a more regenerative response to injury with minimal scarring is the oral mucosa. We generated a microarray gene expression dataset to examine the response to injury from human palate and skin excisional biopsies spanning the first seven days after wounding. Differential expression analyses were performed in each tissue to identify genes overexpressed or underexpressed over time compared to baseline unwounded tissue. To attribute biological processes of interest to these gene expression changes, gene set enrichment analysis was used to identify core gene sets that are enriched over the time-course of the wound healing process with respect to unwounded tissue. This analysis identified gene sets uniquely enriched in either palate or skin wounds and gene sets that are enriched in both tissues in at least one time point after injury. Finally, a cell type enrichment analysis was performed to better understand the cell type distribution in these tissues and how it changes over the time course of wound healing. This work provides a source of human wound gene expression data that includes two tissue types with distinct regenerative and scarring phenotypes. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.
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