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Laser capture microdissection on surgical tissues to identify aberrant gene expression in impaired wound healing in type 2 diabetes

No / The global prevalence Type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) is escalating at a rapid rate. Patients with T2DM suffer from a multitude of complications and one of these is impaired wound healing. This can lead to the development of non-healing sores or foot ulcers and ultimately to amputation. In healthy individuals, wound healing follows a controlled and overlapping sequence of events encompassing inflammation, proliferation, and remodelling. In T2DM, one or more of these steps becomes dysfunctional. Current models to study impaired wound healing in T2DM include in vitro scratch wound assays, skin equivalents, or animal models to examine molecular mechanisms underpinning wound healing and/or potential therapeutic options. However, these do not fully recapitulate the complex wound healing process in T2DM patients, and ex vivo human skin tests are problematic due to the ethics of taking punch biopsies from patients where it is known they will heal poorly. Here, a technique is described whereby expression profiles of the specific cells involved in the (dys)functional wound healing response in T2DM patients can be examined using surplus tissue discarded following amputation or elective cosmetic surgery. In this protocol samples of donated skin are collected, wounded, cultured ex vivo in the air liquid interface, fixed at different time points and sectioned. Specific cell types involved in wound healing (e.g., epidermal keratinocytes, dermal fibroblasts (papillary and reticular), the vasculature) are isolated using laser capture microdissection and differences in gene expression analyzed by sequencing or microarray, with genes of interest further validated by qPCR. This protocol can be used to identify inherent differences in gene expression between both poorly healing and intact skin, in patients with or without diabetes, using tissue ordinarily discarded following surgery. It will yield greater understanding of the molecular mechanisms contributing to T2DM chronic wounds and lower limb loss. / European Commission 7th Framework Programme for Research and Technical Development - Marie Curie Innovative Training Networks (ITN), Grant agreement no 607886. Aveda, Hair Innovation & Technology, USA

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:BRADFORD/oai:bradscholars.brad.ac.uk:10454/18481
Date05 May 2021
CreatorsWilliams, Rachel, Castellano-Pelicena, Irene, Al-Rikabi, Aaiad H.A., Sikkink, Stephen, Baker, Richard, Riches-Suman, Kirsten, Thornton, M. Julie
Source SetsBradford Scholars
LanguageEnglish
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeArticle, No full-text in the repository

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