A RHAMM Mimetic Peptide Blocks Hyaluronan Signaling and Reduces Inflammation and Fibrogenesis in Excisional Skin Wounds
- 01A peptide was designed to block hyaluronan signaling
- 02It reduced inflammation and fibrosis in animal skin wounds
- 03This may promote a form of healing with less scarring
- 04The peptide specifically targets the RHAMM receptor
A specially designed peptide, applied to skin wounds in rats, reduced inflammation and markers of scar formation by blocking hyaluronan signaling.
Hyaluronan is activated by fragmentation and controls inflammation and fibroplasia during wound repair and diseases (eg, cancer). Hyaluronan-binding peptides were identified that modify fibrogenesis during skin wound repair. Peptides were selected from 7- to 15mer phage display libraries by panning with hyaluronan-Sepharose beads and assayed for their ability to block fibroblast migration in response to hyaluronan oligosaccharides (10 kDa). A 15mer peptide (P15-1), with homology to receptor for hyaluronan mediated motility (RHAMM) hyaluronan binding sequences, was the most effective inhibitor. P15-1 bound to 10-kDa hyaluronan with an affinity of K(d) = 10(-7) and appeared to specifically mimic RHAMM since it significantly reduced binding of hyaluronan oligosaccharides to recombinant RHAMM but not to recombinant CD44 or TLR2,4, and altered wound repair in wild-type but not RHAMM(-/-) mice. One topical application of P15-1 to full-thickness excisional rat wounds significantly reduced wound macrophage number, fibroblast number, and blood vessel density compared to scrambled, negative control peptides. Wound collagen 1, transforming growth factor β-1, and α-smooth muscle actin were reduced, whereas tenascin C was increased, suggesting that P15-1 promoted a form of scarless healing. Signaling/microarray analyses showed that P15-1 blocks RHAMM-regulated focal adhesion kinase pathways in fibroblasts. These results identify a new class of reagents that attenuate proinflammatory, fibrotic repair by blocking hyaluronan oligosaccharide signaling.
- APA
- Cornelia Tolg, Sara R Hamilton, Ewa Zalinska, Lori McCulloch, Ripal Amin, Natalia Akentieva, Francoise Winnik, Rashmin Savani, Darius J Bagli, Len G Luyt, Mary K Cowman, Jim B McCarthy, & Eva A Turley (2012). A RHAMM Mimetic Peptide Blocks Hyaluronan Signaling and Reduces Inflammation and Fibrogenesis in Excisional Skin Wounds. https://fasciaresearchdatabase.com/a-rhamm-mimetic-peptide-blocks-hyaluronan-signaling-and-reduces-inflammation-and-fibrogenesis-in-excisional-skin-wounds/
- MLA
- Cornelia Tolg, et al. "A RHAMM Mimetic Peptide Blocks Hyaluronan Signaling and Reduces Inflammation and Fibrogenesis in Excisional Skin Wounds." 2012, https://fasciaresearchdatabase.com/a-rhamm-mimetic-peptide-blocks-hyaluronan-signaling-and-reduces-inflammation-and-fibrogenesis-in-excisional-skin-wounds/.
- Chicago
- Cornelia Tolg et al. 2012. "A RHAMM Mimetic Peptide Blocks Hyaluronan Signaling and Reduces Inflammation and Fibrogenesis in Excisional Skin Wounds.". https://fasciaresearchdatabase.com/a-rhamm-mimetic-peptide-blocks-hyaluronan-signaling-and-reduces-inflammation-and-fibrogenesis-in-excisional-skin-wounds/
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