An in Vitro Model for the Study of Human Hair Growth

    Michael P. Philpott, Gillian Westgate, Terence Kealey
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    TLDR Researchers created a lab model to study human hair growth, showing it can grow and self-regulate outside the body.
    Researchers developed an in vitro model to study human hair growth by isolating anagen hair follicles from the scalp and maintaining them in a supplemented medium. Over 4 days, the follicles showed significant length increase due to keratinized hair shaft production without losing morphology. DNA synthesis and keratin patterns remained consistent with in vivo conditions. Serum inhibited growth, but serum-free medium allowed growth for up to 10 days, indicating self-regulation by the follicles. The model demonstrated that TGF-beta 1 negatively regulated growth, while EGF and TGF-alpha mimicked in vivo depilatory effects, highlighting its potential for studying hair follicle biology and growth mechanisms.
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