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AUTOCRINE-ACTING EARLY SECRETED MITOGENIC ACTIVITY: PRODUCTION AND RESPONSIVENESS IN CULTURES OF NORMAL HUMAN KERATINOCYTES AS A FUNCTION OF IN VIVO AND IN VITRO AGE

✍ Scribed by Maria Luisa Tenchini; Fabio Savant; Cinzia Paini; Maria Claudia Montefusco; Vera Donati; Massimo Malcovati


Publisher
Elsevier Science
Year
2001
Tongue
English
Weight
189 KB
Volume
25
Category
Article
ISSN
1065-6995

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✦ Synopsis


Cultured epithelial grafts are used in the clinical treatment of both non-healing and acute partial-thickness wounds, owing to their ability to stimulate endogenous re-epithelialization. We have previously demonstrated that during the first 24 h following plating, human epidermal keratinocytes secrete an autocrine-acting mitogenic activity. Since the biological activity of cultured grafts is believed to decrease with cellular age, the effect of both in vivo and in vitro keratinocyte age on the secretion of this mitogenic activity, as well as on responsiveness to this activity, was studied. Keratinocytes from donors ranging in age from 2 to 81 years were analysed at increasing in vitro population doublings. Secretion into the medium of the mitogenic activity was not affected by either in vivo or in vitro cellular ageing, while responsiveness of keratinocytes to this mitogenic activity was age-related. These results suggest that cultured grafts from elderly donors may be effective in wound treatment.