7 research outputs found

    Epithelial arginase-1 is a key mediator of age-associated delayed healing in vaginal injury

    Get PDF
    Pelvic organ prolapse is a disorder that substantially affects the quality of life of millions of women worldwide. The greatest risk factors for prolapse are increased parity and older age, with the largest group requiring surgical intervention being post-menopausal women over 65. Due to ineffective healing in the elderly, prolapse recurrence rates following surgery remain high. Therefore, there is an urgent need to elucidate the cellular and molecular drivers of poor healing in pelvic floor dysfunction to allow effective management and even prevention. Recent studies have uncovered the importance of Arginase 1 for modulating effective healing in the skin. We thus employed novel in vitro and in vivo vaginal injury models to determine the specific role of Arginase 1 in age-related vaginal repair. Here we show, for the first time, that aged rat vaginal wounds have reduced Arginase 1 expression and delayed healing. Moreover, direct inhibition of Arginase 1 in human vaginal epithelial cells also led to delayed scratch-wound closure. By contrast, activation of Arginase 1 significantly accelerated healing in aged vaginal wounds in vivo, to rates comparable to those in young animals. Collectively, these findings reveal a new and important role for Arginase 1 in mediating effective vaginal repair. Targeting age-related Arginase 1 deficiency is a potential viable therapeutic strategy to promote vaginal healing and reduce recurrence rate after surgical repair of pelvic organ prolapse

    The microbiota regulates murine inflammatory responses to toxin-induced CNS demyelination but has minimal impact on remyelination.

    Get PDF
    The microbiota is now recognized as a key influence on the host immune response in the central nervous system (CNS). As such, there has been some progress toward therapies that modulate the microbiota with the aim of limiting immune-mediated demyelination, as occurs in multiple sclerosis. However, remyelination-the regeneration of myelin sheaths-also depends upon an immune response, and the effects that such interventions might have on remyelination have not yet been explored. Here, we show that the inflammatory response during CNS remyelination in mice is modulated by antibiotic or probiotic treatment, as well as in germ-free mice. We also explore the effect of these changes on oligodendrocyte progenitor cell differentiation, which is inhibited by antibiotics but unaffected by our other interventions. These results reveal that high combined doses of oral antibiotics impair oligodendrocyte progenitor cell responses during remyelination and further our understanding of how mammalian regeneration relates to the microbiota.This work was supported by grants from UK Multiple Sclerosis Society, The British Trust for the Myelin Project, MedImmune, The Adelson Medical Research Foundation, Wellcome Trust, BBSRC, the Leverhulme Trust and a core support grant from the Wellcome Trust and MRC to the Wellcome Trust - Medical Research Council Cambridge Stem Cell Institute. CEM was supported by grants from the Jean Shanks Foundation and the James Baird Fund, AGF was supported by an ECTRIMS fellowship and OBZ received a BIRAX fellowship

    Systemically transplanted mesenchymal stem cells induce vascular-like structure formation in a rat model of vaginal injury.

    No full text
    The beneficial effect of mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) on wound healing is mostly attributed to a trophic effect that promotes angiogenesis. Whether MSCs can contribute to the formation of new blood vessels by direct differentiation is still controversial. Pelvic floor dysfunction (PFD) is a group of disorders that negatively affect the quality of women's lives. Traditional vaginal surgical repair provides disappointing anatomical outcome. Stem cell transplantation may be used to supplement surgery and improve its outcome. Here we aimed to examine the engraftment, survival, differentiation and angiogenic effect of transplanted MSCs in a vaginal injury rat model. MSCs were obtained from the bone marrow of Sprague Drawley (SD) rats, expanded and characterized in vitro. The MSCs expressed CD90 and CD29, did not express CD45, CD34, CD11b and CD31 and could differentiate into osteogenic, chondrogenic and adipogenic lineages. Cells were labeled with either PKH-26 or GFP and transplanted systemically or locally to female SD rats, just after a standardized vaginal incision was made. Engraftment after local transplantation was less efficient at all-time points compared to systemic administration. In the systemically transplanted animal group, MSCs migrated to the injury site and were present in the healed vagina for at least 30 days. Both systemic and local MSCs transplantation promoted host angiogenesis. Systemically transplanted MSCs created new vascular-like structures by direct differentiation into endothelium. These findings pave the way to further studies of the potential role of MSCs transplantation in improving surgical outcome in women with PFD
    corecore