Organotypic cultures as aging associated disease models
TL;DR: A recent review as mentioned in this paper highlights recent progress in tissue engineering applied to organotypic models, highlighting examples explicitly linked to aging and associated disease, as well as examples of models that are relevant to aging.
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Abstract: Aging remains a primary risk factor for a host of diseases, including leading causes of death. Aging and associated diseases are inherently multifactorial, with numerous contributing factors and phenotypes at the molecular, cellular, tissue, and organismal scales. Despite the complexity of aging phenomena, models currently used in aging research possess limitations. Frequently used in vivo models often have important physiological differences, age at different rates, or are genetically engineered to match late disease phenotypes rather than early causes. Conversely, routinely used in vitro models lack the complex tissue-scale and systemic cues that are disrupted in aging. To fill in gaps between in vivo and traditional in vitro models, researchers have increasingly been turning to organotypic models, which provide increased physiological relevance with the accessibility and control of in vitro context. While powerful tools, the development of these models is a field of its own, and many aging researchers may be unaware of recent progress in organotypic models, or hesitant to include these models in their own work. In this review, we describe recent progress in tissue engineering applied to organotypic models, highlighting examples explicitly linked to aging and associated disease, as well as examples of models that are relevant to aging. We specifically highlight progress made in skin, gut, and skeletal muscle, and describe how recently demonstrated models have been used for aging studies or similar phenotypes. Throughout, this review emphasizes the accessibility of these models and aims to provide a resource for researchers seeking to leverage these powerful tools.
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Development of a tissue-engineered skin model with epidermal, dermal and hypodermal components
V. L. Workman,A-V. Giblin,N. H. Green,S. MacNeil,V. Hearnden +4 more
TL;DR: A tissue-engineered model of skin consisting of epidermal, dermal and hypodermal layers, namely a trilayer skin model that maintained native extracellular matrix architecture, contained a heterogeneous population of cells and has the potential to be applied to a range of different applications where research questions require the inclusion of a hypodermis.
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Diversity of human skin three-dimensional organotypic cultures
Yunlong Jia,Scott X. Atwood +1 more
Abstract: Recently, significant strides have been made in the development of high-fidelity skin organoids, encompassing techniques such as 3D bioprinting, skin-on-a-chip systems, and models derived from pluripotent stem cells (PSCs), replicating appendage structures and diverse skin cell types. Despite the emergence of these state-of-the-art skin engineering models, human organotypic cultures (OTCs), initially proposed in the 1970s, continue to reign as the predominant in vitro cultured three-dimensional skin model in the field of tissue engineering. This enduring prevalence is owed to their cost-effectiveness, straight forward setup, time efficiency, and faithful representation of native human skin. In this review, we systematically delineate recent advances in skin OTC models, aiming to inform future efforts to enhance in vitro skin model fidelity and reproducibility.
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