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1.
Cell ; 185(25): 4717-4736.e25, 2022 Dec 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36493752

ABSTRACT

Adult mammalian skin wounds heal by forming fibrotic scars. We report that full-thickness injuries of reindeer antler skin (velvet) regenerate, whereas back skin forms fibrotic scar. Single-cell multi-omics reveal that uninjured velvet fibroblasts resemble human fetal fibroblasts, whereas back skin fibroblasts express inflammatory mediators mimicking pro-fibrotic adult human and rodent fibroblasts. Consequently, injury elicits site-specific immune responses: back skin fibroblasts amplify myeloid infiltration and maturation during repair, whereas velvet fibroblasts adopt an immunosuppressive phenotype that restricts leukocyte recruitment and hastens immune resolution. Ectopic transplantation of velvet to scar-forming back skin is initially regenerative, but progressively transitions to a fibrotic phenotype akin to the scarless fetal-to-scar-forming transition reported in humans. Skin regeneration is diminished by intensifying, or enhanced by neutralizing, these pathologic fibroblast-immune interactions. Reindeer represent a powerful comparative model for interrogating divergent wound healing outcomes, and our results nominate decoupling of fibroblast-immune interactions as a promising approach to mitigate scar.


Subject(s)
Reindeer , Wound Healing , Adult , Animals , Humans , Cicatrix/pathology , Fibroblasts/pathology , Skin Transplantation , Skin/pathology , Fetus/pathology
2.
Dev Cell ; 53(2): 185-198.e7, 2020 04 20.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32315612

ABSTRACT

Skin aging is accompanied by hair loss due to impairments in hair follicle (HF) epithelial progenitor cells and their mesenchymal niche. This inductive mesenchyme, called dermal papilla (DP), undergoes progressive cell loss and eventual miniaturization that contributes to HF pathogenesis. Using laser ablation and fate mapping, we show that HF dermal stem cells (hfDSCs) reconstitute the damaged DP and maintain hair growth, suggesting that hfDSC dysfunction may trigger degeneration of the inductive niche. Fate mapping over 24 months revealed progressive hfDSC depletion, and in vivo clonal analysis of aged hfDSCs showed impaired self-renewal and biased differentiation. Single-cell RNA-seq confirmed hfDSCs as a central precursor, giving rise to divergent mesenchymal trajectories. In aged skin, hfDSCs exhibited senescent-like characteristics, and senescence-associated secretory phenotypes were identified in the aging HF mesenchyme. These results clarify fibroblast dynamics within the HF and suggest that progressive dysfunction within the mesenchymal progenitor pool contributes to age-related hair loss.


Subject(s)
Alopecia/etiology , Cell Differentiation , Cellular Senescence , Dermis/pathology , Hair Follicle/pathology , Mesenchymal Stem Cells/pathology , Age Factors , Alopecia/metabolism , Alopecia/pathology , Animals , Cell Proliferation , Dermis/metabolism , Female , Hair Follicle/metabolism , Male , Mesenchymal Stem Cells/metabolism , Mice , Mice, Inbred C57BL , Regeneration
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