Thursday, August 21, 2025

Health

Australian scientists grow world’s 1st living skin with blood supply in lab

IANS | August 21, 2025 11:14 AM

SYDNEY: In a first, a team of Australian scientists has grown the world's first fully functioning lab-made human skin with its own blood supply. The advance may pave the way for better treatment of skin diseases, burns, and grafts.

The team from the University of Queensland used stem cells to create a replica of the human skin, which had blood vessels, capillaries, hair follicles, nerves, tissue layers, and immune cells.

"This is the most life-like skin model that's been developed anywhere in the world and will allow us to study diseases and test treatments more accurately, " said lead researcher Abbas Shafiee, a tissue engineering and regenerative medicine scientist from UQ's Frazer Institute.

“Until now, scientists have been limited in how we study skin diseases and develop new therapies.

“But with a skin model like this, that closely mimics real human skin, we will be able to study diseases more closely, test treatments, and develop new therapies more effectively, ” Shafiee said.

He explained that recent advancements in stem cells enabled them to engineer 3-dimensional skin lab models. The team took human skin cells and reprogrammed them into stem cells -- which can be turned into any type of cell in the body.

These stem cells were placed in petri dishes, which then grew into mini versions of skin, called skin organoids.

“We then used the same stem cells to create tiny blood vessels and added these to the growing skin, ” the scientist said.

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