9 research outputs found

    In vivo reprogramming of wound-resident cells generates skin epithelial tissue

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    Large cutaneous ulcers are, in severe cases, life threatening(1,2). As the global population ages, non-healing ulcers are becoming increasingly common(1,2). Treatment currently requires the transplantation of pre-existing epithelial components, such as skin grafts, or therapy using cultured cells(2). Here we develop alternative supplies of epidermal coverage for the treatment of these kinds of wounds. We generated expandable epithelial tissues using in vivo reprogramming of wound-resident mesenchymal cells. Transduction of four transcription factors that specify the skin-cell lineage enabled efficient and rapid de novo epithelialization from the surface of cutaneous ulcers in mice. Our findings may provide a new therapeutic avenue for treating skin wounds and could be extended to other disease situations in which tissue homeostasis and repair are impaired

    Cloning and variation of ground state intestinal stem cells

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    Stem cells of the gastrointestinal tract, pancreas, liver, and other columnar epithelia collectively resist cloning in their elemental states. Here we demonstrate the cloning and propagation of highly clonogenic, “ground state” stem cells of the human intestine and colon. We show that derived stem cell pedigrees sustain limited copy number and sequence variation despite extensive serial passaging and display exquisitely precise, cell-autonomous commitment to epithelial differentiation consistent with their origins along the intestinal tract. This developmentally patterned and epigenetically maintained commitment of stem cells likely enforces the functional specificity of the adult intestinal tract. Using clonally-derived colonic epithelia, we show that toxins A or B of the enteric pathogen C. difficile recapitulate the salient features of pseudomembranous colitis. The stability of the epigenetic commitment programs of these stem cells, coupled with their unlimited replicative expansion and maintained clonogenicity, suggests certain advantages for their use in disease modeling and regenerative medicine

    Synthetic polymeric biomaterials for wound healing: a review

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    Advanced therapies in wound management: cell and tissue based therapies, physical and bio-physical therapies smart and IT based technologies

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