Becker David L, Thrasivoulou Christopher, Phillips Anthony R J
Department of Cell and Developmental Biology, University College, London, WC1E 6BT, UK.
Biochim Biophys Acta. 2012 Aug;1818(8):2068-75. doi: 10.1016/j.bbamem.2011.11.017. Epub 2011 Nov 29.
Skin lesions are common events and we have evolved to rapidly heal them in order to maintain homeostasis and prevent infection and sepsis. Most acute wounds heal without issue, but as we get older our bodies become compromised by poor blood circulation and conditions such as diabetes, leading to slower healing. This can result in stalled or hard-to-heal chronic wounds. Currently about 2% of the Western population develop a chronic wound and this figure will rise as the population ages and diabetes becomes more prevalent [1]. Patient morbidity and quality of life are profoundly altered by chronic wounds [2]. Unfortunately a significant proportion of these chronic wounds fail to respond to conventional treatment and can result in amputation of the lower limb. Life quality and expectancy following amputation is severely reduced. These hard to heal wounds also represent a growing economic burden on Western society with published estimates of costs to healthcare services in the region of $25B annually [3]. There exists a growing need for specific and effective therapeutic agents to improve healing in these wounds. In recent years the gap junction protein Cx43 has been shown to play a pivotal role early on in the acute wound healing process at a number of different levels [4-7]. Conversely, abnormal expression of Cx43 in wound edge keratinocytes was shown to underlie the poor rate of healing in diabetic rats, and targeting its expression with an antisense gel restored normal healing rates [8]. The presence of Cx43 in the wound edge keratinocytes of human chronic wounds has also been reported [9]. Abnormal Cx43 biology may underlie the poor healing of human chronic wounds and be amenable therapeutic intervention [7]. This article is part of a Special Issue entitled: The Communicating junctions, composition, structure and characteristics.
皮肤损伤是常见的情况,我们已经进化出能够迅速愈合伤口的能力,以维持体内平衡并预防感染和败血症。大多数急性伤口能顺利愈合,但随着年龄的增长,我们的身体会因血液循环不良和糖尿病等疾病而受到影响,导致愈合速度变慢。这可能会导致慢性伤口停滞不愈或难以愈合。目前,约2%的西方人口患有慢性伤口,随着人口老龄化和糖尿病患病率的上升,这一数字还会增加[1]。慢性伤口会严重改变患者的发病率和生活质量[2]。不幸的是,这些慢性伤口中有很大一部分对传统治疗没有反应,可能导致下肢截肢。截肢后的生活质量和预期寿命会严重降低。这些难以愈合的伤口也给西方社会带来了日益沉重的经济负担,据公布的估计,每年医疗服务的成本约为250亿美元[3]。越来越需要有针对性的有效治疗药物来促进这些伤口的愈合。近年来,缝隙连接蛋白Cx43已被证明在急性伤口愈合过程的早期多个不同层面发挥着关键作用[4-7]。相反,糖尿病大鼠伤口边缘角质形成细胞中Cx43的异常表达被证明是愈合速度缓慢的原因,用反义凝胶靶向其表达可恢复正常愈合速度[8]。也有报道称人类慢性伤口的边缘角质形成细胞中存在Cx43[9]。Cx43生物学异常可能是人类慢性伤口愈合不良的原因,并且适合进行治疗干预[7]。本文是名为:通讯连接、组成、结构和特征的特刊的一部分。