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Animal Models for Studies of Keloid Scarring
被引:42
|作者:
Supp, Dorothy M.
[1
,2
]
机构:
[1] Shriners Hosp Children, Res Dept, 3229 Burnet Ave, Cincinnati, OH 45229 USA
[2] Univ Cincinnati, Coll Med, Dept Surg, Cincinnati, OH USA
关键词:
keloid;
animal model;
scar;
wound healing;
extracellular matrix;
fibrosis;
RED DUROC PIG;
NUDE-MOUSE MODEL;
QUALITY-OF-LIFE;
HYPERTROPHIC SCARS;
GENE-EXPRESSION;
SKIN SUBSTITUTES;
MICE;
TISSUE;
THICKNESS;
PORCINE;
D O I:
10.1089/wound.2018.0828
中图分类号:
R75 [皮肤病学与性病学];
学科分类号:
100206 ;
摘要:
Significance: Keloid scarring is a disfiguring fibroproliferative disorder that can significantly impair the quality of life in affected individuals. The mechanisms that initiate keloid scarring are incompletely understood, and keloids remain one of the most challenging skin conditions to treat. Keloids are unique to humans; thus, the lack of adequate animal models has hindered research efforts aimed at prevention and effective therapeutic intervention. Recent Advances: In the absence of a suitable animal model, keloid researchers often rely on studying excised keloid scar tissue and keloid-derived cultured cells. Recently, in vivo models have been described that involve transplantation to mice of reconstructed skin containing keloid-derived fibroblasts and/or keratinocytes. These mouse-human hybrid animal models display some similarities with keloids and may enable investigation of novel therapies, although no model yet recapitulates all the features of human keloid scarring. Critical Issues: Differences in skin physiology and modes of healing contribute to challenges in modeling keloids in laboratory animals. Furthermore, recent studies suggest that cells of the immune system contribute to keloid pathology. The need to use immunodeficient hosts for transplanted human keloid cells in recently described animal models precludes studying the role of the immune system in keloid scarring. Future Directions: Future animal models may take advantage of humanized mice with immune systems reconstituted using human immune cells. Such models, when combined with grafted tissues prepared using keloid-derived cells, might enable investigation of complex interactions between systemic and local factors that combine to promote keloid scar formation and may aid in the development of novel therapies.
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页码:77 / 89
页数:13
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