41 research outputs found
Angiogenin released from ABCB5+ stromal precursors improves healing of diabetic wounds by promoting angiogenesis
Severe angiopathy is a major driver for diabetes-associated secondary complications. Knowledge on the underlying mechanisms essential for advanced therapies to attenuate these pathologies is limited. Injection of ABCB5+ stromal precursors at the edge of nonhealing diabetic wounds in a murine db/db model, closely mirroring human type 2 diabetes, profoundly accelerates wound closure. Strikingly, enhanced angiogenesis was substantially enforced by the release of the ribonuclease angiogenin from ABCB5+ stromal precursors. This compensates for the profoundly reduced angiogenin expression in nontreated murine chronic diabetic wounds. Silencing of angiogenin in ABCB5+ stromal precursors before injection significantly reduced angiogenesis and delayed wound closure in diabetic db/db mice, implying an unprecedented key role for angiogenin in tissue regeneration in diabetes. These data hold significant promise for further refining stromal precursorsâbased therapies of nonhealing diabetic foot ulcers and other pathologies with impaired angiogenesis
Newly defined ATP-binding cassette subfamily B member 5 positive dermal mesenchymal stem cells promote healing of chronic iron-overload wounds via secretion of interleukin-1 receptor antagonist
In this study, we report the beneficial effects of a newly identified dermal cell subpopulation expressing the ATPâbinding cassette subfamily B member 5 (ABCB5) for the therapy of nonhealing wounds. Local administration of dermal ABCB5+âderived mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) attenuated macrophageâdominated inflammation and thereby accelerated healing of fullâthickness excisional wounds in the ironâoverload mouse model mimicking the nonhealing state of human venous leg ulcers. The observed beneficial effects were due to interleukinâ1 receptor antagonist (ILâ1RA) secreted by ABCB5+âderived MSCs, which dampened inflammation and shifted the prevalence of unrestrained proinflammatory M1 macrophages toward repair promoting antiâinflammatory M2 macrophages at the wound site. The beneficial antiâinflammatory effect of ILâ1RA released from ABCB5+âderived MSCs on human wound macrophages was conserved in humanized NODâscid IL2rÎł null mice. In conclusion, human dermal ABCB5+ cells represent a novel, easily accessible, and markerâenriched source of MSCs, which holds substantial promise to successfully treat chronic nonhealing wounds in humans
Analysing the European Union's responses to organized crime through different securitization lenses
In the past 30 years, organized crime (OC) has shifted from being an issue of little, or no concern, to being considered one of the key security threats facing the European Union (EU), the economic and political fabric of its society and its citizens. The purpose of this article is to understand how OC has come to be understood as one of the major security threats in the EU, by applying different lenses of Securitization Theory (ST). More specifically, the research question guiding this article is whether applying different ST approaches can lead us to draw differing conclusions as to whether OC has been successfully securitized in the EU. Building on the recent literature that argues that this theoretical framework has branched out into different approaches, this article wishes to contrast two alternative views of how a security problem comes into being, in order to verify whether different approaches can lead to diverging conclusions regarding the same phenomenon. The purpose of this exercise is to contribute to the further development of ST by pointing out that the choice in approach bears direct consequences on reaching a conclusion regarding the successful character of a securitization process. Starting from a reflection on ST, the article proceeds with applying a âlinguistic approachâ to the case study, which it then contrasts with a âsociological approachâ. The article proposes that although the application of a âlinguistic approachâ seems to indicate that OC has become securitized in the EU, it also overlooks a number of elements, which the âsociological approachâ renders visible and which lead us to refute the initial conclusion