Publications by authors named "Julien Coutier"

Deciphering the pathways that regulate human epidermal precursor cell fate is necessary for future developments in skin repair and graft bioengineering. Among them, characterization of pathways regulating the keratinocyte (KC) precursor immaturity versus differentiation balance is required for improving the efficiency of KC precursor ex vivo expansion. In this study, we show that the transcription factor MXD4/MAD4 is expressed at a higher level in quiescent KC stem/progenitor cells located in the basal layer of human epidermis than in cycling progenitors.

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Epidermolysis bullosa simplex (EBS), an autosomal dominant skin disorder, is characterized by skin fragility. Genetically, the majority of cases are related to missense sequence variations in two keratin genes K5 or K14, leading to cytolysis of basal keratinocytes (KCs) and intraepidermal blistering. Progress toward the identification of treatments has been hampered by an incomplete understanding of the mechanisms underlying this disease and availability of relevant and reliable in vitro models recapitulating the physiopathological mechanisms.

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Chronic wounds, such as leg ulcers associated with sickle cell disease, occur as a consequence of a prolonged inflammatory phase during the healing process. They are extremely hard to heal and persist as a significant health care problem due to the absence of effective treatment and the uprising number of patients. Indeed, there is a critical need to develop novel cell- and tissue-based therapies to treat these chronic wounds.

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Expanded autologous skin keratinocytes are currently used in cutaneous cell therapy, and embryonic-stem-cell-derived keratinocytes could become a complementary alternative. Regardless of keratinocyte provenance, for efficient therapy it is necessary to preserve immature keratinocyte precursors during cell expansion and graft processing. Here, we show that stable and transient downregulation of the transcription factor Krüppel-like factor 4 (KLF4) in keratinocyte precursors from adult skin, using anti-KLF4 RNA interference or kenpaullone, promotes keratinocyte immaturity and keratinocyte self-renewal in vitro, and enhances the capacity for epidermal regeneration in mice.

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The functional definition of somatic adult stem cells is based on their regenerative capacity, which allows tissue regeneration throughout life. Thus, refining methodologies to characterize this capacity is of great importance for progress in the fundamental knowledge of specific keratinocyte subpopulations but also for preclinical and clinical research, considering the high potential of keratinocytes in cell therapy. We present here a methodology which we define as iterative xenografting, which originates in the classical model of human skin substitute xenografts onto immunodeficient recipient mice.

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Genetic and epigenetic characterization of the large cellular diversity observed within tissues is essential to understanding the molecular networks that ensure the regulation of homeostasis, repair, and regeneration, but also pathophysiological processes. Skin is composed of multiple cell lineages and is therefore fully concerned by this complexity. Even within one particular lineage, such as epidermal keratinocytes, different immaturity statuses or differentiation stages are represented, which are still incompletely characterized.

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