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CHANCE DISCOVERY OF IMMORTAL SKIN HOLDS MEDICAL PROMISE
14 November 2000 - University of Wisconsin-Madison

From a routine study of the life span of human skin cells, a University of Wisconsin-Madison research project gave rise to an astonishing accident: A line of skin cells that simply wouldn't die.

The research team witnessed a rare "spontaneous mutation" when a small cluster of cells in a petri dish continued to actively divide. The amazed scientists continued to grow this unique cell line over the course of a year without the cells showing any signs of slowing down.

Today, this laboratory anomaly has proven to be more than skin deep. The effort has grown into a patented product, a full-fledged commercial venture and a series of new medical research pursuits.

A new UW-Madison spin-off company called Stratatech, housed at University Research Park in Madison, is actively pursuing a number of markets for its patented "immortal human skin," including the prospect of much-needed tools for treatment of severe burn patients.

"There are a lot of opportunities dovetailing out of this single basic discovery that are very exciting," says Lynn Allen-Hoffmann, a professor of pathology in the UW-Madison Medical School and managing director of Stratatech.

"It would be a career dream come true to develop some kind of off-the-shelf product that would be available to doctors," she adds.

Clinical applications are several years away, but the company recently received promising news: Its first animal tests confirmed that the novel skin will cover and heal superficial wounds. Most importantly, Allen-Hoffmann says the cells grow into distinct stratified layers to become essentially no different from normal skin.

"That was the really big finding in all this, the critical piece of information we needed to prove," she says. "These cells proved to be incredibly normal."

The unique tissue is comprised entirely of keratinocyte cells, which make up the vast majority of human skin cells. Allen-Hoffmann says the cells can be genetically engineered to fit different medical or research needs.

Stratatech currently has contracts with a major cosmetics company to use the skin line for consumer products testing. By using the Stratatech product, the company can prove its products are safe for humans without the need for animal testing.

Another very promising market for the cell line, called NIKS (for Near-diploid Immortalized Keratinocyte Skin), is in drug discovery. Allen-Hoffmann says scientists can engineer different diseases of human skin, such as cancers or viral infections, and be able to test drugs within that "normal" tissue environment. Allen-Hoffmann's lab currently has studies under way using the NIKS cells to study skin cancer and effects of environmental toxicants such as dioxin.

But the technology's value to burn medicine may be most dramatic. That point was driven home for Allen-Hoffmann when she was invited to observe a grafting procedure at UW Hospital on a man who suffered third-degree burns on the majority of his body.

The surgeon, Michael Schurr of the UW Hospital Burn Center, wanted to illustrate how current methods are woefully inadequate. "It was an absolute epiphany for me," Allen-Hoffmann says. "I saw what little was available to him in terms of how he treats a patient like this. It was very humbling."

Schurr is an advisor to Stratatech and is also collaborating with Allen-Hoffmann on ongoing medical research projects. The need for burn treatment alternatives is acute, with more than 13,000 burn hospitalizations each year requiring extensive skin grafting.

A key milestone remains in proving the tissue would not be rejected by human patients, she says.

Stratatech has plans to move quickly toward possible medical uses, with clinical trials and work with regulatory agencies leading to initial human trials by 2002. Allen-Hoffmann says a number of basic research projects at UW-Madison and elsewhere also are likely to capitalize on this newfound ability to develop realistic models of human skin disease.

Allen-Hoffmann notes that what exactly happened to create these cells remains shrouded in mystery. They arose from a 1996 project in which her research team was studying aging of human skin. The skin used for the experiment was from discarded foreskin from a circumcision. Lab manager Sandy Schlosser, co-discoverer of the NIKS cells, noticed tiny cluster of cells emerged in a petri dish of dead skin cells and ultimately "wound-healed" across the entire dish.

The researchers know how these cells differ genetically, in that they have a duplication of one section of the long arm of chromosome eight. Beyond that, they are remarkably similar to the parent cells. But the group tried to regenerate the same cell line in experiments and were unable to do so.

Allen-Hoffman says these types of mutations are one in a million in science. There are only four other documented examples of "immortal" cells developing out of laboratory work, and all of those cases have caveats that limit their usefulness.

Operating out of rapidly filling space at the MGE Innovation Center, Stratatech now has a dozen employees and includes some of Allen-Hoffmann's graduate students who were part of the initial discovery. Her husband, UW-Madison oncology professor Michael Hoffmann, is director of business development and is researching cancer-related applications.

http://www.wisc.edu

About: University of Wisconsin-Madison
In achievement and prestige, the University of Wisconsin-Madison has long been recognized as one of America’s great universities. A public, land-grant institution, UW-Madison offers a complete spectrum of liberal arts studies, professional programs and student activities. Many of its programs are hailed as world leaders in instruction, research and public service.

The university traces its roots to a clause in the Wisconsin Constitution, which decreed that the state should have a prominent public university. In 1848, Nelson Dewey, Wisconsin’s first governor, signed the act that formally created the university, and its first class, with 17 students, met in a Madison school building on February 5, 1849.

From those humble beginnings, the university has grown into a large, diverse community, with about 40,000 students enrolled each year. These students represent every state in the nation, as well as countries from around the globe, making for a truly international population.

UW-Madison is the oldest and largest campus in the University of Wisconsin System, a statewide network of 13 comprehensive universities, 13 freshman-sophomore transfer colleges and an extension service. One of two doctorate-granting universities in the system, UW-Madison’s specific mission is to provide "a learning environment in which faculty, staff and students can discover, examine critically, preserve and transmit the knowledge, wisdom and values that will help insure the survival of this and future generations and improve the quality of life for all."

The university achieves these ends through innovative programs of research, teaching and public service. Throughout its history, UW-Madison has sought to bring the power of learning into the daily lives of its students through innovations such as residential learning communities and service-learning opportunities. Students also participate freely in research, which has led to life-improving inventions from more fuel-efficient engines to cutting-edge genetic therapies.

Students, faculty and staff are motivated by a tradition known as the "Wisconsin Idea," described by UW President Charles Van Hise in 1904 as the compelling need to carry "the beneficent influence of the university ... to every home in the state." The Wisconsin Idea permeates the university’s work and helps forge close working relationships among university faculty and students and the state’s industries and government.


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