4.3 Article

Dysregulated healing responses in diabetic wounds occur in the early stages postinjury

Journal

JOURNAL OF MOLECULAR ENDOCRINOLOGY
Volume 66, Issue 2, Pages 141-155

Publisher

BIOSCIENTIFICA LTD
DOI: 10.1530/JME-20-0256

Keywords

wound healing; diabetes; inflammation; substance P

Funding

  1. National Research Foundation (NRF) of South Africa
  2. Harry Crossley Foundation
  3. NRF
  4. South African Tuberculosis Bioinformatics Initiative (SATBBI)
  5. South African Medical Research Council
  6. South African Department of Science and Technology

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This study showed that chronic wounds in obese diabetic individuals have delayed healing processes and dysregulated protein expression compared to acute wounds. Early intervention in the healing process may be crucial for effective outcomes.
Chronic wounds are a serious and debilitating complication of diabetes. A better understanding of the dysregulated healing responses following injury will provide insight into the optimal time frame for therapeutic intervention. In this study, a direct comparison was done between the healing dynamics and the proteome of acute and obese diabetic wounds on days 2 and 7 following injury. Full th ickness excisional wounds were induced on obese diabetic (B6.Cg-lepob/J, ob/ob, n = 14) (blood glucose 423.25 +/- 127.92 mg/dL) and WT control (C57BL/6J, n = 14) (blood glucose 186.67 +/- 24.5 mg/dL) mice. Histological analysis showed no signs of healing in obese DM wounds whereas complete wound closure/re-epithelisation, the formation of granulation tissue and signs of re-vascularisation, was evident in acute wounds on day 7. In obese DM wounds, substance P deficiency and increased MMP-9 activity on day 2 coi ncided with increased cytokine/chemokine levels within wound fluid. LC-MS/MS identified 906 proteins, of which 23 (Actn3, Itga6, Epb41, Sncg, Nefm, Rsp18, Rsp19, Rpl22, Macroh2a1, Rpn1, Ppib, Snrnp70, Ddx5, Eif3g, Tpt1, FABP5, Cavin1, Stfa1, Stfa3, Cycs, Tkt, Mb, Chmp2a) were differentially expressed in wounded tissue on day 2 ( P < 0.05; more than two-fold) and 6 (Cfd, Ptms, Hp, Hmga1, Cbx3, Syap1) ( P < 0.05; more than two-fold) on day 7. A large number of dysregulated proteins on day 2 was associated with an inability to progress into the proliferative stage of healing and suggest that early intervention might be pivotal for effective healing outcomes. The proteomic approach highlighted the complexity of obese DM wounds in which the dysregulation involves multiple regulatory pathways and biological processes.

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