Journal of Tissue Engineering (Aug 2017)

Development and characterisation of a low-concentration sodium dodecyl sulphate decellularised porcine dermis

  • Jack A Helliwell,
  • Daniel S Thomas,
  • Vaia Papathanasiou,
  • Shervanthi Homer-Vanniasinkam,
  • Amisha Desai,
  • Louise M Jennings,
  • Paul Rooney,
  • John N Kearney,
  • Eileen Ingham

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1177/2041731417724011
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8

Abstract

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The aim of this study was to adapt a proprietary decellularisation process for human dermis for use with porcine skin. Porcine skin was subject to: sodium chloride (1 M) to detach the epidermis, trypsin paste to remove hair follicles, peracetic acid (0.1% v/v) disinfection, washed in hypotonic buffer and 0.1% (w/v) sodium dodecyl sulphate in the presence of proteinase inhibitors followed by nuclease treatment. Cellular porcine skin, decellularised porcine and human dermis were compared using histology, immunohistochemistry, GSL-1 lectin (alpha-gal epitope) staining, biochemical assays, uniaxial tensile and in vitro cytotoxicity tests. There was no microscopic evidence of cells in decellularised porcine dermis. DNA content was reduced by 98.2% compared to cellular porcine skin. There were no significant differences in the biomechanical parameters studied or evidence of cytotoxicity. The decellularised porcine dermis retained residual alpha-gal epitope. Basement membrane collagen IV immunostaining was lost following decellularisation; however, laminin staining was retained.