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Online edition of India's National Newspaper Thursday, April 12, 2001 |
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Skin substitute: Promoting wound healing
BIOENGINEERS AT the University at Buffalo and Shriners Burns
Hospital-Boston have created a genetically engineered skin that
expresses a protein that promotes wound healing. It is believed
to be the only artificial tissue designed to express keratinocyte
growth factor, KGF.
Their research, published in the Journal of the Federation of
American Societies of Experimental Biology, suggests that a skin
substitute could be developed that would accelerate the
generation of new skin following severe injuries or burns.
Currently, there is no FDA-approved skin substitute for treating
burns.
The research demonstrates for the first time that a growth factor
can bring about significant changes in the three-dimensional
organization and function of a skin equivalent in vitro.
Stelios T. Andreadis, assistant professor in the UB Department of
Chemical Engineering, director of the UB Bioengineering
Laboratory and lead author on the paper, said the researchers
have submitted a grant proposal for animal studies aimed at
confirming whether the artificial skin would have a therapeutic
effect. "Our goal was to create genetically modified skin
equivalents that secrete keratinocyte growth factor as a means to
accelerate wound healing," said Andreadis.
"We also wanted to create a model system to study the effects of
this protein on the development and morphogenesis of engineered
skin tissues." Andreadis said the presence of KGF "appears to
have profound effects on wound healing, by spurring the
proliferation of skin cells." He added that the genetically
modified tissue substitute has a number of advantages that make
it a good candidate for a skin substitute.
"What's significant about our substitute is that it contains the
basement membrane - the matrix molecules that the cells of the
epidermis like to sit on - that retains the natural composition
and topography of skin," he added.
The genetically engineered skin also has high mechanical
stability and is pliable, important advantages over skins made
from collagen gels, which, he said, have a consistency similar to
that of gelatin and therefore are much more difficult to use.
Most important, Andreadis explained, the engineered tissue has
good barrier function, preventing dehydration and protecting
against pathogens. "This is very important for burn patients who
have lost a substantial fraction of their total body surface area
and who suffer from excessive dehydration and bacterial
infections," he said. "Because they are very much like real skin,
the engineered cell-based skin equivalents can provide these
functions."
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