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Morphological changes of human skin cells exposed to a DC electric field <i>in vitro</i> using a new exposure system
14
Citations
52
References
2001
Year
Tissue EngineeringEngineeringHigh Voltage Electrical FieldsCytoskeletonBiomedical EngineeringDermatologyCellular PhysiologyMorphological ChangesNew Exposure SystemExperimental DermatologyMechanobiologySkin DevelopmentCutaneous BiologyTissue PhysiologyCell BiomechanicsCell BiologyHuman Skin CellsElectrophysiologyWound HealingHuman SkinMedicineWound ManagementDermal StructureExtracellular Matrix
Abstract The human skin contains a physiological battery that could be implicated in the healing process, by creating an endogenous electric field. Skin cells undergo morphological changes in response to an external DC electric field (EF). We found that fibroblasts reorient their cell bodies in a manner perpendicular to the EF direction, for normal and above physiological intensities. Actin and tubulin filaments (cytoskeleton proteins) follow the same pattern of reorientation. Keratinocytes tend to elongate in the same direction, although to a lesser extent. The study of the response of human skin cells to an external EF is a first step toward a better understanding of the mechanisms involved in wound healing and eventually toward the improvement of wound repair.
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