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Abstract Biomaterial wound dressings, such as hydrogels, interact with host cells to regulate tissue repair. This study investigates how crosslinking of gelatin-based hydrogels influences immune and stromal cell behavior and wound healing in female mice. We observe that softer, lightly crosslinked hydrogels promote greater cellular infiltration and result in smaller scars compared to stiffer, heavily crosslinked hydrogels. Using single-cell RNA sequencing, we further show that heavily crosslinked hydrogels increase inflammation and lead to the formation of a distinct macrophage subpopulation exhibiting signs of oxidative activity and cell fusion. Conversely, lightly crosslinked hydrogels are more readily taken up by macrophages and integrated within the tissue. The physical properties differentially affect macrophage and fibroblast interactions, with heavily crosslinked hydrogels promoting pro-fibrotic fibroblast activity that drives macrophage fusion through RANKL signaling. These findings suggest that tuning the physical properties of hydrogels can guide cellular responses and improve healing, offering insights for designing better biomaterials for wound treatment.more » « less
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Shaked, Natan T.; Hayden, Oliver (Ed.)We report label-free, in vivo virtual histology of skin using reflectance confocal microscopy (RCM). We trained a deep neural network to transform in vivo RCM images of unstained skin into virtually stained H&E-like microscopic images with nuclear contrast. This framework successfully generalized to diverse skin conditions, e.g., normal skin, basal cell carcinoma, and melanocytic nevi, as well as distinct skin layers, including the epidermis, dermal-epidermal junction, and superficial dermis layers. This label-free in vivo skin virtual histology framework can be transformative for faster and more accurate diagnosis of malignant skin neoplasms, with the potential to significantly reduce unnecessary skin biopsies.more » « less
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Volpe, Giovanni; Pereira, Joana B.; Brunner, Daniel; Ozcan, Aydogan (Ed.)Reflectance confocal microscopy (RCM) can provide in vivo images of the skin with cellular-level resolution; however, RCM images are grayscale, lack nuclear features and have a low correlation with histology. We present a deep learning-based virtual staining method to perform non-invasive virtual histology of the skin based on in vivo, label-free RCM images. This virtual histology framework revealed successful inference for various skin conditions, such as basal cell carcinoma, also covering distinct skin layers, including epidermis and dermal-epidermal junction. This method can pave the way for faster and more accurate diagnosis of malignant skin neoplasms while reducing unnecessary biopsies.more » « less
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