4.6 Article

Regeneration of rete ridges in Lanyu pig (Sus scrofa): Insights for human skin wound healing

Journal

EXPERIMENTAL DERMATOLOGY
Volume 28, Issue 4, Pages 472-479

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/exd.13875

Keywords

regeneration; rete ridge; scar; skin; wound healing

Categories

Funding

  1. National Cheng Kung University
  2. Ministry of Science and Technology (MOST) [106-2314-B-006-006]

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Rete ridges are important to the mechanical function of skin in animals with minimal hair, including humans. As mice do not exhibit rete ridges, the need for a quality animal model is pertinent. Here, we develop a Lanyu pig (Sus scrofa) full-thickness wound model to explore tissue regeneration because the architecture and function are similar to humans and inbred genetic variants are available. Full-and partial-thickness wounds were generated on the dorsum. Full-thickness wounds at post-wound day 57 exhibit severe scar with no signs of wound-induced hair follicle neogenesis. Wound contraction is greater in the anterior/posterior relative to the medial/lateral axis. In wound beds, K14+ cells increased while K10(+), p63(+) and PCNA(+) cells decreased compared to unwounded tissue. Epithelial beta-catenin is unchanged. The wound bed expresses more ColI, less ColIII and no elastin. Rete ridges do not form after full-thickness wounding, but incompletely regenerate after partial-thickness wounding. An alkaline phosphatase (ALP)(+) cell population, not associated with hair follicles, is present at the bottom of the rete ridge basal layer in pig and human unwounded skin. These K5(+)/ K10(-)/PCNA-/ALP(+) epithelial cells are absent after full-thickness wounding but reappear after partial-thickness wounding, before invagination of new rete ridges. In summary, full-thickness wounding on the dorsum of Lanyu pigs results in scar formation and perturbed molecular expression while partial-thickness wounding permits limited rete ridge and papillary dermis regeneration. Future functional studies and further characterization will help contribute knowledge for the regenerative medicine field.

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