伤口愈合
生物
巨噬细胞极化
巨噬细胞
炎症
免疫系统
表观遗传学
小RNA
细胞生物学
免疫学
癌症研究
M2巨噬细胞
医学
体外
基因
遗传学
作者
Sonya Wolf,William J. Melvin,Katherine Gallagher
标识
DOI:10.1016/j.semcdb.2021.06.013
摘要
Non-healing wounds in Type 2 Diabetes (T2D) patients represent the most common cause of amputation in the US, with an associated 5-year mortality of nearly 50%. Our lab has examined tissue from both T2D murine models and human wounds in order to explore mechanisms contributing to impaired wound healing. Current published data in the field point to macrophage function serving a pivotal role in orchestrating appropriate wound healing. Wound macrophages in mice and patients with T2D are characterized by a persistent inflammatory state; however, the mechanisms that control this persistent inflammatory state are unknown. Current literature demonstrates that gene regulation through histone modifications, DNA modifications, and microRNA can influence macrophage plasticity during wound healing. Further, accumulating studies reveal the importance of cells such as adipocytes, infiltrating immune cells (PMNs and T cells), and keratinocytes secrete factors that may help drive macrophage polarization. This review will examine the role of macrophages in the wound healing process, along with their function and interactions with other cells, and how it is perturbed in T2D. We also explore epigenetic factors that regulate macrophage polarization in wounds, while highlighting the emerging role of other cell types that may influence macrophage phenotype following tissue injury.
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