19 research outputs found

    The influence of Flightless I on toll-like-receptor-mediated inflammation in a murine model of diabetic wound healing

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    Impaired wound healing and ulceration represent a serious complication of both type 1 and type 2 diabetes. Cytoskeletal protein Flightless I (Flii) is an important inhibitor of wound repair, and reduced Flii gene expression in fibroblasts increased migration, proliferation, and adhesion. As such it has the ability to influence all phases of wound healing including inflammation, remodelling and angiogenesis. Flii has the potential to modulate inflammation through its interaction with MyD88 which it an adaptor protein for TLR4. To assess the effect of Flii on the inflammatory response of diabetic wounds, we used a murine model of streptozocin-induced diabetes and Flii genetic mice. Increased levels of Flii were detected in Flii transgenic murine wounds resulting in impaired healing which was exacerbated when diabetes was induced. When Flii levels were reduced in diabetic wounds of Flii-deficient mice, healing was improved and decreased levels of TLR4 were observed. In contrast, increasing the level of Flii in diabetic mouse wounds led to increased TLR4 and NF-κB production. Treatment of murine diabetic wounds with neutralising antibodies to Flii led to an improvement in healing with decreased expression of TLR4. Decreasing the level of Flii in diabetic wounds may therefore reduce the inflammatory response and improve healing.Nadira Ruzehaji, Stuart J. Mills, Elizabeth Melville, Ruth Arkell, Robert Fitridge and Allison J. Cowi

    Burn Wound Management: a surgical perspective

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    Any patient who survives a large burn injury will be left with some degree of scarring. As well as affecting the form and function of the skin, scarring can have severe psychological consequences such as post-traumatic stress disorder and depression 1. This is particularly the case for hypertrophic or keloid scars, which are common after serious burns. Despite this, the process underlying their formation is incompletely understood and limited effective options are available for their treatment. This paper reviews current understanding of the pathophysiology of the wound healing process in relation to burns and reviews the current management for burn wounds.Cameron AM, Ruzehaji N & Cowin A

    Attenuation of flightless I improves wound healing and enhances angiogenesis in a murine model of type 1 diabetes

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    AIMS/HYPOTHESIS: Skin lesions and ulcerations are severe complications of diabetes that often result in leg amputations. In this study we investigated the function of the cytoskeletal protein flightless I (FLII) in diabetic wound healing. We hypothesised that overexpression of FLII would have a negative effect on diabetic wound closure and modulation of this protein using specific FLII-neutralising antibodies (FnAb) would enhance cellular proliferation, migration and angiogenesis within the diabetic wound. METHODS: Using a streptozotocin-induced model of diabetes we investigated the effect of altered FLII levels through Flii genetic knockdown, overexpression or treatment with FnAb on wound healing. Diabetic wounds were assessed using histology, immunohistochemistry and biochemical analysis. In vitro and in vivo assays of angiogenesis were used to assess the angiogenic response. RESULTS: FLII levels were elevated in the wounds of both diabetic mice and humans. Reduction in the level of FLII improved healing of murine diabetic wounds and promoted a robust pro-angiogenic response with significantly elevated von Willebrand factor (vWF) and vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF)-positive endothelial cell infiltration. Diabetic mouse wounds treated intradermally with FnAb showed improved healing and a significantly increased rate of re-epithelialisation. FnAb improved the angiogenic response through enhanced formation of capillary tubes and functional neovasculature. Reducing the level of FLII led to increased numbers of mature blood vessels, increased recruitment of smooth muscle actin-α-positive cells and improved tight junction formation. CONCLUSIONS/INTERPRETATION: Reducing the level of FLII in a wound may be a potential therapeutic approach for the treatment of diabetic foot ulcers.Nadira Ruzehaji, Zlatko Kopecki, Elizabeth Melville, Sarah L. Appleby, Claudine S. Bonder, Ruth M. Arkell, Robert Fitridge, Allison J. Cowi

    Cytoskeletal protein Flightless (Flii) is elevated in chronic and acute human wounds and wound fluid: neutralizing its activity in chronic but not acute wound fluid improves cellular proliferation

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    Chronic non-healing wounds form a medical need which will expand as the population ages and the obesity epidemic grows. Whilst the complex mechanisms underlying wound repair are not fully understood, remodelling of the actin cytoskeleton plays a critical role. Elevated expression of the actin cytoskeletal protein Flightless I (Flii) is known to impair wound outcomes. To determine if Flii is involved in the impaired healing observed in chronic wounds, its expression in non-healing human wounds from patients with venous leg ulcers was determined and compared to its expression in acute wounds and unwounded skin. Increased expression of Flii was observed in both chronic and acute wounds with wound fluid and plasma also containing secreted Flii protein. Inflammation is a key aspect of wound repair and fluorescence-activated cell sorting (FACS) analysis revealed Flii was located in neutrophils within the blood and that it co-localised with CD16+ neutrophils in chronic wounds. The function of secreted Flii was investigated as both chronic wound fluid and Flii have previously been shown to inhibit fibroblast proliferation. To determine if the inhibitory effect of wound fluid was due in part to the presence of Flii, wound fluids were depleted of Flii using Flii-specific neutralizing antibodies (FnAb). Flii depleted chronic wound fluid no longer inhibited fibroblast proliferation, suggesting that Flii may contribute to the inhibitory effect of chronic wound fluid on fibroblast function. Application of FnAbs to chronic wounds may therefore be a novel approach used to improve the local environment of non-healing wounds and potentially improve healing outcomes.Nadira Ruzehaji, Randall Grose, Doreen Krumbiegel, Heddy Zola, Pallave Dasari, Hilary Wallace, Michael Stacey, Robert Fitridge, Allison J. Cowi

    Attenuation of flightless I improves wound healing and enhances angiogenesis in a murine model of type 1 diabetes

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    Aims/hypothesis: Skin lesions and ulcerations are severe complications of diabetes that often result in leg amputations. In this study we investigated the function of the cytoskeletal protein flightless I (FLII) in diabetic wound healing. We hypothesise

    OX40L blockade protects against inflammation-driven fibrosis.

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    Treatment for fibrosis represents a critical unmet need, because fibrosis is the leading cause of death in industrialized countries, and there is no effective therapy to counteract the fibrotic process. The development of fibrosis relates to the interplay between vessel injury, immune cell activation, and fibroblast stimulation, which can occur in various tissues. Immunotherapies have provided a breakthrough in the treatment of immune diseases. The glycoprotein OX40-OX40 ligand (OX40L) axis offers the advantage of a targeted approach to costimulatory signals with limited impact on the whole immune response. Using systemic sclerosis (SSc) as a prototypic disease, we report compelling evidence that blockade of OX40L is a promising strategy for the treatment of inflammation-driven fibrosis. OX40L is overexpressed in the fibrotic skin and serum of patients with SSc, particularly in patients with diffuse cutaneous forms. Soluble OX40L was identified as a promising serum biomarker to predict the worsening of lung and skin fibrosis, highlighting the role of this pathway in fibrosis. In vivo, OX40L blockade prevents inflammation-driven skin, lung, and vessel fibrosis and induces the regression of established dermal fibrosis in different complementary mouse models. OX40L exerts potent profibrotic effects by promoting the infiltration of inflammatory cells into lesional tissues and therefore the release of proinflammatory mediators, thereafter leading to fibroblast activation

    PTP4A1 promotes TGFβ signaling and fibrosis in systemic sclerosis

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    Although protein tyrosine kinases are being explored as antifibrotic agents for the treatment of systemic sclerosis, little is known about the function of counteractive protein tyrosine phosphatases in this context. Here, the authors show that PTP4A1 is highly expressed by fibroblasts from patients with systemic sclerosis and promotes TGFβ activity via SRC–ERK–SMAD3 signaling
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