Establishment of an in vitro model of cultured viable human, porcine and canine skin and comparison of different media supplements

Transdermal drug delivery provides several advantages over conventional drug administration, such as the avoidance of first-pass metabolism and better patient compliance. In vitro research can abbreviate and facilitate the pharmaceutical development considerably compared to in vivo research as drug...

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Main Authors: Isa Bauhammer, Manuel Sacha, Eleonore Haltner
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: PeerJ Inc. 2019-10-01
Series:PeerJ
Subjects:
Online Access:https://peerj.com/articles/7811.pdf
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spelling doaj-4be17eee08634ac1862fdc9a4ae392ca2020-11-25T01:52:30ZengPeerJ Inc.PeerJ2167-83592019-10-017e781110.7717/peerj.7811Establishment of an in vitro model of cultured viable human, porcine and canine skin and comparison of different media supplementsIsa Bauhammer0Manuel Sacha1Eleonore Haltner2Across Barriers GmbH, Saarbrücken, GermanyAcross Barriers GmbH, Saarbrücken, GermanyAcross Barriers GmbH, Saarbrücken, GermanyTransdermal drug delivery provides several advantages over conventional drug administration, such as the avoidance of first-pass metabolism and better patient compliance. In vitro research can abbreviate and facilitate the pharmaceutical development considerably compared to in vivo research as drug screening and clinical studies can be reduced. These advantages led to the development of corresponding skin models. Viable skin models are more useful than non-viable ones, due to the influence of skin metabolism on the results. While most in vitro studies concentrate on evaluating human-based models, the current study is designed for the investigation of both human and animal diseases. So far, there is little information available in the literature about viable animal skin cultures which are in fact intended for application in the veterinary and not the human field. Hence, the current study aims to fill the gap. For the in vitro viable skin model, specimens of human, porcine and canine skin were cultured over two weeks under serum-free conditions. To evaluate the influence of medium supplementation on skin viability, two different supplement mixtures were compared with basic medium. The skin specimens were maintained at a viability-level >50% until the end of the study. From the tested supplements, the addition of bovine pituitary extract and epidermal growth factor increased skin viability whereas hydrocortisone and insulin induced a decrease. This in vitro viable skin model may be a useful tool for the investigation of skin diseases, especially for the veterinary field.https://peerj.com/articles/7811.pdfIn vitroHuman skin modelAnimal skin modelSkin viabilityMedium supplements
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Isa Bauhammer
Manuel Sacha
Eleonore Haltner
spellingShingle Isa Bauhammer
Manuel Sacha
Eleonore Haltner
Establishment of an in vitro model of cultured viable human, porcine and canine skin and comparison of different media supplements
PeerJ
In vitro
Human skin model
Animal skin model
Skin viability
Medium supplements
author_facet Isa Bauhammer
Manuel Sacha
Eleonore Haltner
author_sort Isa Bauhammer
title Establishment of an in vitro model of cultured viable human, porcine and canine skin and comparison of different media supplements
title_short Establishment of an in vitro model of cultured viable human, porcine and canine skin and comparison of different media supplements
title_full Establishment of an in vitro model of cultured viable human, porcine and canine skin and comparison of different media supplements
title_fullStr Establishment of an in vitro model of cultured viable human, porcine and canine skin and comparison of different media supplements
title_full_unstemmed Establishment of an in vitro model of cultured viable human, porcine and canine skin and comparison of different media supplements
title_sort establishment of an in vitro model of cultured viable human, porcine and canine skin and comparison of different media supplements
publisher PeerJ Inc.
series PeerJ
issn 2167-8359
publishDate 2019-10-01
description Transdermal drug delivery provides several advantages over conventional drug administration, such as the avoidance of first-pass metabolism and better patient compliance. In vitro research can abbreviate and facilitate the pharmaceutical development considerably compared to in vivo research as drug screening and clinical studies can be reduced. These advantages led to the development of corresponding skin models. Viable skin models are more useful than non-viable ones, due to the influence of skin metabolism on the results. While most in vitro studies concentrate on evaluating human-based models, the current study is designed for the investigation of both human and animal diseases. So far, there is little information available in the literature about viable animal skin cultures which are in fact intended for application in the veterinary and not the human field. Hence, the current study aims to fill the gap. For the in vitro viable skin model, specimens of human, porcine and canine skin were cultured over two weeks under serum-free conditions. To evaluate the influence of medium supplementation on skin viability, two different supplement mixtures were compared with basic medium. The skin specimens were maintained at a viability-level >50% until the end of the study. From the tested supplements, the addition of bovine pituitary extract and epidermal growth factor increased skin viability whereas hydrocortisone and insulin induced a decrease. This in vitro viable skin model may be a useful tool for the investigation of skin diseases, especially for the veterinary field.
topic In vitro
Human skin model
Animal skin model
Skin viability
Medium supplements
url https://peerj.com/articles/7811.pdf
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AT eleonorehaltner establishmentofaninvitromodelofculturedviablehumanporcineandcanineskinandcomparisonofdifferentmediasupplements
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