Engineering the Keratinocyte Microenvironment: Harnessing Topography to Direct Cellular Function

Skin wound healing presents a challenging and expensive clinical problem with nearly 20 million wounds requiring intervention leading to an annual cost of more than $8 million. Tissue engineered skin substitutes are valuable not only as a clinical therapy for chronic wounds and severe traumas, but a...

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Main Author: Clement, Amanda Lynn
Other Authors: Stelios T. Andreadis, Committee Member
Format: Others
Published: Digital WPI 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:https://digitalcommons.wpi.edu/etd-dissertations/23
https://digitalcommons.wpi.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1022&context=etd-dissertations
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spelling ndltd-wpi.edu-oai-digitalcommons.wpi.edu-etd-dissertations-10222019-03-22T05:43:12Z Engineering the Keratinocyte Microenvironment: Harnessing Topography to Direct Cellular Function Clement, Amanda Lynn Skin wound healing presents a challenging and expensive clinical problem with nearly 20 million wounds requiring intervention leading to an annual cost of more than $8 million. Tissue engineered skin substitutes are valuable not only as a clinical therapy for chronic wounds and severe traumas, but also as in vitro 3D model systems to investigate wound healing and skin pathogenesis. However, these substitutes are limited by a lack of topography at the dermal-epidermal junction (DEJ). In contrast, the native DEJ is characterized by a series of dermal papillae which project upward into the epidermal layer and create physical topographic microniches that support keratinocyte stem cell clustering. In this thesis, we created novel 3D skin model systems to investigate the role of microtopography in regulating keratinocyte function and cell fate using scaffolds containing precisely engineered topographic features. We hypothesized that the microtopography of the DEJ creates distinct keratinocyte microniches that promote epidermal morphogenesis and modulate keratinocyte stem cell clustering which can be harnessed to create a more robust skin substitute that expedites wound closure. Using photolithographic techniques, we created micropatterned DEJ analogs and micropatterned dermal-epidermal regeneration matrices (µDERM) which couple a dermal support matrix to a micropatterned DEJ analog. We found that the incorporation of microtopography into our in vitro skin model resulted in a thicker, more robust epidermal layer. Additionally, we identified three distinct functional keratinocyte niches: the proliferative niche in narrow channels, the synthetic niche in wide channels and the keratinocyte stem cell niche in narrow channels and corner topographies. Ultimately, incorporation of both narrow and wide channels on a single construct allowed us to recreate native keratinocyte stem cell patterning in vitro. These model systems will allow us to investigate the role of cellular microniches in regulating cellular function and epidermal disease pathogenesis as well as to identify topographic cues that enhance the rate of wound healing. 2015-01-12T08:00:00Z text application/pdf https://digitalcommons.wpi.edu/etd-dissertations/23 https://digitalcommons.wpi.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1022&context=etd-dissertations Doctoral Dissertations (All Dissertations, All Years) Digital WPI Stelios T. Andreadis, Committee Member Anjana Jain, Committee Member Tanja Dominko, Committee Member Joseph B. Duffy, Committee Member George D. Pins, Advisor microtopography keratinocyte function tissue engineered skin dermal-epidermal junction
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic microtopography
keratinocyte function
tissue engineered skin
dermal-epidermal junction
spellingShingle microtopography
keratinocyte function
tissue engineered skin
dermal-epidermal junction
Clement, Amanda Lynn
Engineering the Keratinocyte Microenvironment: Harnessing Topography to Direct Cellular Function
description Skin wound healing presents a challenging and expensive clinical problem with nearly 20 million wounds requiring intervention leading to an annual cost of more than $8 million. Tissue engineered skin substitutes are valuable not only as a clinical therapy for chronic wounds and severe traumas, but also as in vitro 3D model systems to investigate wound healing and skin pathogenesis. However, these substitutes are limited by a lack of topography at the dermal-epidermal junction (DEJ). In contrast, the native DEJ is characterized by a series of dermal papillae which project upward into the epidermal layer and create physical topographic microniches that support keratinocyte stem cell clustering. In this thesis, we created novel 3D skin model systems to investigate the role of microtopography in regulating keratinocyte function and cell fate using scaffolds containing precisely engineered topographic features. We hypothesized that the microtopography of the DEJ creates distinct keratinocyte microniches that promote epidermal morphogenesis and modulate keratinocyte stem cell clustering which can be harnessed to create a more robust skin substitute that expedites wound closure. Using photolithographic techniques, we created micropatterned DEJ analogs and micropatterned dermal-epidermal regeneration matrices (µDERM) which couple a dermal support matrix to a micropatterned DEJ analog. We found that the incorporation of microtopography into our in vitro skin model resulted in a thicker, more robust epidermal layer. Additionally, we identified three distinct functional keratinocyte niches: the proliferative niche in narrow channels, the synthetic niche in wide channels and the keratinocyte stem cell niche in narrow channels and corner topographies. Ultimately, incorporation of both narrow and wide channels on a single construct allowed us to recreate native keratinocyte stem cell patterning in vitro. These model systems will allow us to investigate the role of cellular microniches in regulating cellular function and epidermal disease pathogenesis as well as to identify topographic cues that enhance the rate of wound healing.
author2 Stelios T. Andreadis, Committee Member
author_facet Stelios T. Andreadis, Committee Member
Clement, Amanda Lynn
author Clement, Amanda Lynn
author_sort Clement, Amanda Lynn
title Engineering the Keratinocyte Microenvironment: Harnessing Topography to Direct Cellular Function
title_short Engineering the Keratinocyte Microenvironment: Harnessing Topography to Direct Cellular Function
title_full Engineering the Keratinocyte Microenvironment: Harnessing Topography to Direct Cellular Function
title_fullStr Engineering the Keratinocyte Microenvironment: Harnessing Topography to Direct Cellular Function
title_full_unstemmed Engineering the Keratinocyte Microenvironment: Harnessing Topography to Direct Cellular Function
title_sort engineering the keratinocyte microenvironment: harnessing topography to direct cellular function
publisher Digital WPI
publishDate 2015
url https://digitalcommons.wpi.edu/etd-dissertations/23
https://digitalcommons.wpi.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1022&context=etd-dissertations
work_keys_str_mv AT clementamandalynn engineeringthekeratinocytemicroenvironmentharnessingtopographytodirectcellularfunction
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