From: Washington State University
By Sara Zaske, WSU News
PULLMAN, Wash. – September 29, 2020 -- A
newly identified genetic factor allows adult skin to repair itself like the
skin of a newborn babe. The discovery by Washington State University
researchers has implications for better skin wound treatment as well as
preventing some of the aging process in skin.
In a study, published in the journal eLife on
Sept. 29, the researchers identified a factor that acts like a molecular switch
in the skin of baby mice that controls the formation of hair follicles as they
develop during the first week of life. The switch is mostly turned off after
skin forms and remains off in adult tissue. When it was activated in
specialized cells in adult mice, their skin was able to heal wounds without
scarring. The reformed skin even included fur and could make goose bumps, an
ability that is lost in adult human scars.
“We were able to take the innate ability
of young, neonatal skin to regenerate and transfer that ability to old skin,”
said Ryan Driskell, an assistant professor in WSU’s School of Molecular
Biosciences. “We have shown in principle that this kind of regeneration is
possible.”
Mammals are not known for their
regenerative abilities compared to other organisms, such as salamanders that
can regrow entire limbs and regenerate their skin. The WSU study suggests that
the secret to human regeneration might be found by studying our own early
development.
“We can still look to other organisms
for inspiration, but we can also learn about regeneration by looking at
ourselves,” said Driskell. “We do generate new tissue, once in our life, as we
are growing.”
Driskell’s team used a new technique
called single cell RNA sequencing to compare genes and cells in developing and
adult skin. In developing skin, they found a transcription factor–proteins that
bind to DNA and can influence whether genes are turned on or off. The factor
the researchers identified, called Lef1, was associated with papillary
fibroblasts which are developing cells in the papillary dermis, a layer of skin
just below the surface that gives skin its tension and youthful appearance.
When the WSU researchers activated the
Lef1 factor in specialized compartments of adult mouse skin, it enhanced the
skins’ ability to regenerate wounds with reduced scarring, even growing new
hair follicles that could make goose bumps.
Driskell first got the idea to look at
early stages of mammalian life for the capacity to repair skin after learning
of the work of Dr. Michael Longaker of Stanford University. When performing
emergency life-saving surgery in utero, Longaker and his colleagues observed
that when those babies were born they did not have any scars from the surgery.
A lot of work still needs to be done
before this latest discovery in mice can be applied to human skin, Driskell
said, but this is a foundational advance. With the support from a new grant
from the National Institutes of Health, the WSU research team will continue
working to understand how Lef1 and other factors work to repair skin. Also to
help further this research, the Driskell lab has created an open, searchable
web resource for the RNA sequence data for other scientists to access at skinregeneration.org.
https://news.wsu.edu/2020/09/29/discovery-enables-adult-skin-regenerate-like-newborns/
No comments:
Post a Comment