Human saliva stimulates skin and oral wound healing in vitro

C. Rodrigues Neves, J. Buskermolen, S. Roffel, T. Waaijman, M. Thon, E. Veerman, S. Gibbs

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

33 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Despite continuous exposure to environmental pathogens, injured mucosa within the oral cavity heals faster and almost scar free compared with skin. Saliva is thought to be one of the main contributing factors. Saliva may possibly also stimulate skin wound healing. If so, it would provide a novel therapy for treating skin wounds, for example, burns. This study aims to investigate the therapeutic wound healing potential of human saliva in vitro. Human saliva from healthy volunteers was filter sterilized before use. Two different in vitro wound models were investigated: (a) open wounds represented by 2D skin and gingiva cultures were used to assess fibroblast and keratinocyte migration and proliferation and (b) blister wounds represented by introducing freeze blisters into organotypic reconstructed human skin and gingiva. Re-epithelialization and differentiation (keratin K10, K13, K17 expression) under the blister and inflammatory wound healing mediator secretion was assessed. Saliva-stimulated migration of skin and oral mucosa fibroblasts and keratinocytes, but only fibroblast proliferation. Topical saliva application to the blister wound on reconstructed skin did not stimulate re-epithelization because the blister wound contained a dense impenetrable dead epidermal layer. Saliva did promote an innate inflammatory response (increased CCL20, IL-6, and CXCL-8 secretion) when applied topically to the flanking viable areas of both wounded reconstructed human skin and oral mucosa without altering the skin specific keratin differentiation profile. Our results show that human saliva can stimulate oral and skin wound closure and an inflammatory response. Saliva is therefore a potential novel therapeutic for treating open skin wounds.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1079-1092
Number of pages14
JournalJournal of Tissue Engineering and Regenerative Medicine
Volume13
Issue number6
Early online date9 Apr 2019
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Jun 2019

Keywords

  • cell migration
  • inflammatory response
  • oral mucosa
  • proliferation
  • reconstructed human skin
  • saliva
  • therapy
  • wound healing

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