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The migration of epidermal keratinocytes is the basis for skin reepithelialization during wound healing. The in vitro scratch-wound assay using monolayers of primary human epidermal keratinocytes is a straightforward and effective method to assess their migratory capacity. The mechanical scratch of a confluent monolayer directly disrupts the adhesion of the keratinocytes to one another and to the underlying matrix, resembling the physical trauma of a wound in an in vitro assay. The keratinocytes will undergo an epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition, which will confer an ability to migrate toward each other to cover the gap by restructuring cell-cell and cell-extracellular matrix connections. However, a good scratch-wound method and protocol to ensure scratch reproducibility is essential, particularly when using primary cell cultures where donor variability may also impact on results.

Citation

Irene Castellano-Pellicena, M Julie Thornton. Isolation of Epidermal Keratinocytes from Human Skin: The Scratch-Wound Assay for Assessment of Epidermal Keratinocyte Migration. Methods in molecular biology (Clifton, N.J.). 2020;2154:1-12

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PMID: 32314203

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