Regenerative cosmetics can improve skin and hair by reducing wrinkles, healing wounds, and promoting hair growth.
46 citations
,
October 2023 in “Science Advances” The study demonstrates the successful incorporation of hair follicle-like structures into engineered skin tissues using 3D bioprinting. By precisely printing spheroids composed of dermal papilla cells and human umbilical vein cells within a pregelled dermal layer containing fibroblasts, the engineered tissue developed structures that closely resemble native skin. This advancement in creating more complex and realistic skin models holds significant potential for applications in regenerative medicine, particularly as grafts and in testing the safety of chemical compounds.
January 2026 in “International journal of high school research” Combining 3D bioprinting and single-cell RNA sequencing improves skin regeneration.
5 citations
,
April 2021 in “Biomedicines” The engineered skin substitute helped grow skin with hair on mice.
10 citations
,
June 2019 in “Journal of Tissue Engineering and Regenerative Medicine” Scientists successfully grew new hair follicles in regenerated mouse skin using mouse and human cells.