Journal article
A role for pericytes as microenvironmental regulators of human skin tissue regeneration
S Paquet-Fifield, H Schlüter, A Li, T Aitken, P Gangatirkar, D Blashki, R Koelmeyer, N Pouliot, M Palatsides, S Ellis, N Brouard, A Zannettino, N Saunders, N Thompson, J Li, P Kaur
Journal of Clinical Investigation | Published : 2009
DOI: 10.1172/JCI38535
Abstract
The cellular and molecular microenvironment of epithelial stem and progenitor cells is poorly characterized despite well-documented roles in homeostatic tissue renewal, wound healing, and cancer progression. Here, we demonstrate that, in organotypic cocultures, dermal pericytes substantially enhanced the intrinsically low tissue-regenerative capacity of human epidermal cells that have committed to differentiate and that this enhancement was independent of angiogenesis. We used microarray analysis to identify genes expressed by human dermal pericytes that could potentially promote epidermal regeneration. Using this approach, we identified as a candidate the gene LAMA5, which encodes laminin α..
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Awarded by National Institute of Arthritis and Musculoskeletal and Skin Diseases
Funding Acknowledgements
We thank Ralph Rossi and Daud Dahur for their technical support in cell sorting. This work was Supported by a National Health and Medical Research Council of Australia Project Grant 251535 and NIH grant R01 ARO50013-01A2 to P. Kaur.