Wood Stephen, Jayaraman Vijayakumar, Huelsmann Erica J, Bonish Brian, Burgad Derick, Sivaramakrishnan Gayathri, Qin Shanshan, DiPietro Luisa A, Zloza Andrew, Zhang Chunxiang, Shafikhani Sasha H
Department of Immunology/Microbiology, Rush University Medical Center, Chicago, Illinois, United States of America.
Department of Immunology/Microbiology, Rush University Medical Center, Chicago, Illinois, United States of America; Rush University Cancer Center, Rush University Medical Center, Chicago, Illinois, United States of America; Developmental Center for AIDS Research, Rush University Medical Center, Chicago, Illinois, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2014 Mar 11;9(3):e91574. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0091574. eCollection 2014.
Prior studies suggest that the impaired healing seen in diabetic wounds derives from a state of persistent hyper-inflammation characterized by harmful increases in inflammatory leukocytes including macrophages. However, such studies have focused on wounds at later time points (day 10 or older), and very little attention has been given to the dynamics of macrophage responses in diabetic wounds early after injury. Given the importance of macrophages for the process of healing, we studied the dynamics of macrophage response during early and late phases of healing in diabetic wounds. Here, we report that early after injury, the diabetic wound exhibits a significant delay in macrophage infiltration. The delay in the macrophage response in diabetic wounds results from reduced Chemokine (C-C motif) ligand 2 (CCL2) expression. Importantly, one-time treatment with chemoattractant CCL2 significantly stimulated healing in diabetic wounds by restoring the macrophage response. Our data demonstrate that, rather than a hyper-inflammatory state; the early diabetic wound exhibits a paradoxical and damaging decrease in essential macrophage response. Our studies suggest that the restoration of the proper kinetics of macrophage response may be able to jumpstart subsequent healing stages. CCL2 chemokine-based therapy may be an attractive strategy to promote healing in diabetic wounds.
先前的研究表明,糖尿病伤口愈合受损源于一种持续的高炎症状态,其特征是包括巨噬细胞在内的炎性白细胞有害增加。然而,此类研究聚焦于后期时间点(第10天或更晚)的伤口,而对糖尿病伤口受伤后早期巨噬细胞反应的动态变化关注甚少。鉴于巨噬细胞对愈合过程的重要性,我们研究了糖尿病伤口愈合早期和晚期巨噬细胞反应的动态变化。在此,我们报告,受伤后早期,糖尿病伤口的巨噬细胞浸润显著延迟。糖尿病伤口巨噬细胞反应延迟是由于趋化因子(C-C基序)配体2(CCL2)表达降低所致。重要的是,一次性使用趋化因子CCL2治疗通过恢复巨噬细胞反应显著促进了糖尿病伤口的愈合。我们的数据表明,早期糖尿病伤口并非处于高炎症状态,而是表现出关键巨噬细胞反应的反常且有害的降低。我们的研究表明,恢复巨噬细胞反应的适当动力学可能能够启动后续的愈合阶段。基于CCL2趋化因子的治疗可能是促进糖尿病伤口愈合的一种有吸引力的策略。