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Organotypic human skin culture models constructed with senescent fibroblasts show hallmarks of skin aging

Regina Weinmüllner, Barbara Zbiral, Adnan Becirovic, Elena Maria Stelzer, Fabian Nagelreiter, Markus Schosserer, Ingo Lämmermann, Lisa Liendl, Magdalena Lang, Lucia Terlecki‐Ζaniewicz, Orestis G. Andriotis, Michael Mildner, Bahar Golabi, Petra Waidhofer‐Söllner, Karl Schedle

npj Aging and Mechanisms of Disease · 2020 · ▲ 103 citations

Abstract

Skin aging is driven by intrinsic and extrinsic factors impacting on skin functionality with progressive age. One factor of this multifaceted process is cellular senescence(definition), as it has recently been identified to contribute to a declining tissue functionality in old age. In the skin, senescent cells have been found to markedly accumulate with age, and thus might impact directly on skin characteristics. Especially the switch from young, extracellular matrix-building fibroblasts to a senescence-associated secretory phenotype (SASP) could alter the microenvironment in the skin drastically and therefore promote skin aging. In order to study the influence of senescence in human skin, 3D organotypic cultures are a well-suited model system. However, only few "aged" skin- equivalent (SE) models are available, requiring complex and long-term experimental setups. Here, we adapted a previously published full-thickness SE model by seeding increasing ratios of stress-induced premature senescent versus normal fibroblasts into the collagen matrix, terming these SE "senoskin". Immunohistochemistry stainings revealed a shift in the balance between proliferation (Ki67) and differentiation (Keratin 10 and Filaggrin) of keratinocytes within our senoskin equivalents, as well as partial impairment of skin barrier function and changed surface properties. Monitoring of cytokine levels of known SASP factors confirmedly showed an upregulation in 2D cultures of senescent cells and at the time of seeding into the skin equivalent. Surprisingly, we find a blunted response of cytokines in the senoskin equivalent over time during 3D differentiation.

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Provenance

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OpenAlex
DOI
10.1038/s41514-020-0042-x
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2026-06-07 MST

Cite this

APA
Weinmüllner, R., Zbiral, B., Becirovic, A., Stelzer, E.M., Nagelreiter, F., Schosserer, M., Lämmermann, I., Liendl, L., Lang, M., Terlecki‐Ζaniewicz, L., Andriotis, O.G., Mildner, M., Golabi, B., Waidhofer‐Söllner, P., Schedle, K., Emsenhuber, G., Thurner, P.J., Tschachler, E., Грубер, �., &amp; Grillari, J. (2020). Organotypic human skin culture models constructed with senescent fibroblasts show hallmarks of skin aging. <em>npj Aging and Mechanisms of Disease</em>. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41514-020-0042-x
Vancouver
Weinmüllner R, Zbiral B, Becirovic A, Stelzer EM, Nagelreiter F, Schosserer M, et al. Organotypic human skin culture models constructed with senescent fibroblasts show hallmarks of skin aging. npj Aging and Mechanisms of Disease. 2020. doi:10.1038/s41514-020-0042-x.
BibTeX
@article{regina2020Organo, title = {Organotypic human skin culture models constructed with senescent fibroblasts show hallmarks of skin aging}, author = {Regina Weinmüllner and Barbara Zbiral and Adnan Becirovic and Elena Maria Stelzer and Fabian Nagelreiter and Markus Schosserer and Ingo Lämmermann and Lisa Liendl and Magdalena Lang and Lucia Terlecki‐Ζaniewicz and Orestis G. Andriotis and Michael Mildner and Bahar Golabi and Petra Waidhofer‐Söllner and Karl Schedle and Gerhard Emsenhuber and Philipp J. Thurner and Erwin Tschachler and Флориан Грубер and Johannes Grillari}, journal = {npj Aging and Mechanisms of Disease}, year = {2020}, doi = {10.1038/s41514-020-0042-x}, }

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