iScience (Nov 2023)

Pigmented skin exhibits accelerated wound healing compared to the nonpigmented skin in Guinea pig model

  • Rohit Gupta,
  • Anshu Priya,
  • Manish Chowdhary,
  • Vineeta V. Batra,
  • Jyotsna,
  • Perumal Nagarajan,
  • Rajesh S. Gokhale,
  • Archana Singh

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 26, no. 11
p. 108159

Abstract

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Summary: This study investigated and compared the wound healing kinetics of pigmented (PG) and non-pigmented (NP) skin in guinea pigs, focusing on histological and transcriptional changes. Full-thickness wounds created on PG and NP skin were evaluated at various time points post-injury. Fontana-Masson staining and ultrastructural analysis suggested the presence of melanin and melanosomes in PG skin, which coincided with an upregulation of melanogenic genes cKIT, TYR, and DCT. On day 9 post-wound, PG skin exhibited a rapid transition from the inflammatory to proliferative phase, which correlated with the reappearance of epidermal pigmentation whereas the NP skin exhibited a delayed neo-epidermis formation. Furthermore, the study revealed that melanocyte-derived growth factors (conditioned media) positively regulated keratinocyte migration while inhibiting fibroblast differentiation. These effects were more prominent in tyrosine-treated (hyperpigmented) melanocyte-CM as was TGF- β expression. These findings provide valuable insights into the mechanisms underlying skin repair and pigmentation.

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