Telocytes inhibited inflammatory factor expression and enhanced cell migration in LPS-induced skin wound healing models in vitro and in vivo
- 01Telocytes are more numerous in chronic human wounds
- 02Adding telocytes improved healing in inflamed mouse wounds
- 03Telocytes protected skin cells from inflammatory damage
- 04They reduced cell death and promoted cell migration
Telocytes, a type of connective tissue cell, may help skin wounds heal by reducing inflammation and protecting other key skin cells.
Background: Cell proliferation and death are key components of wound healing and tissue repair. Telocytes (TCs) represent a newly discovered cell type that can protect tissue from acute injury via cell-cell communication with adjacent cells. The aim of this study was to use a mouse model of skin wound healing and lipopolysaccharide (LPS)-induced cell injury to evaluate the effects of TCs on skin wound healing in vivo and in vitro.
Material/methods: Immunohistochemical staining was performed to evaluate the alteration of TCs in tissues from normal and chronic wound patients. Then, a male C57BL/6 mouse wound model of the back was established. The mice were divided randomly into three groups, and wound healing was estimated according to the wound healing rate and histology. An LPS-induced co-culture model of a mouse lung telocyte cell line (TCs) with human keratinocyte (HaCaT), human dermal microvascular endothelial cell (HDMEC) or murine fibroblast (L929) cell lines was established to analyse the effects of TCs on constitutive cell types of the skin. Cell proliferation, migration and apoptosis were examined, and reactive oxygen species (ROS) and inflammatory factors in HaCaT cells, HDMECs, and L929 cells were detected to study the mechanisms involved in TC protection in skin wounds.
Results: TCs were significantly increased in tissues from chronic wound patients compared with healthy controls. Wound healing was significantly improved in wound mouse models treated with exogenous TCs compared with LPS-induced models. TCs reversed the LPS-induced inhibition of HaCaT cells and HDMECs and reduced the LPS-induced apoptosis of HaCaT cells and the death ratios of HDMECs and L929 cells. TCs reversed LPS-induced ROS in HDMECs and L929 cells and decreased inflammatory factor mRNA levels in HaCaT cells, HDMECs and L929 cells.
Conclusions: TCs reduce wound healing delay, and inflammatory responses caused by LPS might be mediated by inflammatory inhibition, thus restricting apoptosis and promoting migration of the main component cell types in the skin.
- APA
- Lu Wang, Dongli Song, Chuanyuan Wei, Cheng Chen, Yanwen Yang, Xinyi Deng, & Jianying Gu (2020). Telocytes inhibited inflammatory factor expression and enhanced cell migration in LPS-induced skin wound healing models in vitro and in vivo. https://fasciaresearchdatabase.com/telocytes-inhibited-inflammatory-factor-expression-and-enhanced-cell-migration-in-lps-induced-skin-wound-healing-models-in-vitro-and-in-vivo/
- MLA
- Lu Wang, et al. "Telocytes inhibited inflammatory factor expression and enhanced cell migration in LPS-induced skin wound healing models in vitro and in vivo." 2020, https://fasciaresearchdatabase.com/telocytes-inhibited-inflammatory-factor-expression-and-enhanced-cell-migration-in-lps-induced-skin-wound-healing-models-in-vitro-and-in-vivo/.
- Chicago
- Lu Wang et al. 2020. "Telocytes inhibited inflammatory factor expression and enhanced cell migration in LPS-induced skin wound healing models in vitro and in vivo.". https://fasciaresearchdatabase.com/telocytes-inhibited-inflammatory-factor-expression-and-enhanced-cell-migration-in-lps-induced-skin-wound-healing-models-in-vitro-and-in-vivo/
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