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Combination of Adrenomedullin with Its Binding Protein Accelerates Cutaneous Wound Healing

Cutaneous wound continues to cause significant morbidity and mortality in the setting of diseases such as diabetes and cardiovascular diseases. Despite advances in wound care management, there is still an unmet medical need exists for efficient therapy for cutaneous wound. Combined treatment of adre...

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Autores principales: Idrovo, Juan-Pablo, Yang, Weng-Lang, Jacob, Asha, Ajakaiye, Michael A., Cheyuo, Cletus, Wang, Zhimin, Prince, Jose M., Nicastro, Jeffrey, Coppa, Gene F., Wang, Ping
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4363560/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25781901
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0120225
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author Idrovo, Juan-Pablo
Yang, Weng-Lang
Jacob, Asha
Ajakaiye, Michael A.
Cheyuo, Cletus
Wang, Zhimin
Prince, Jose M.
Nicastro, Jeffrey
Coppa, Gene F.
Wang, Ping
author_facet Idrovo, Juan-Pablo
Yang, Weng-Lang
Jacob, Asha
Ajakaiye, Michael A.
Cheyuo, Cletus
Wang, Zhimin
Prince, Jose M.
Nicastro, Jeffrey
Coppa, Gene F.
Wang, Ping
author_sort Idrovo, Juan-Pablo
collection PubMed
description Cutaneous wound continues to cause significant morbidity and mortality in the setting of diseases such as diabetes and cardiovascular diseases. Despite advances in wound care management, there is still an unmet medical need exists for efficient therapy for cutaneous wound. Combined treatment of adrenomedullin (AM) and its binding protein-1 (AMBP-1) is protective in various disease conditions. To examine the effect of the combination treatment of AM and AMBP-1 on cutaneous wound healing, full-thickness 2.0-cm diameter circular excision wounds were surgically created on the dorsum of rats, saline (vehicle) or AM/AMBP-1 (96/320 μg kg BW) was topically applied to the wound daily and wound size measured. At days 3, 7, and 14, skin samples were collected from the wound sites. AM/AMBP-1 treated group had significantly smaller wound surface area than the vehicle group over the 14-day time course. At day 3, AM/AMBP-1 promoted neutrophil infiltration (MPO), increased cytokine levels (IL-6 and TNF-α), angiogenesis (CD31, VEGF and TGFβ-1) and cell proliferation (Ki67). By day 7 and 14, AM/AMBP-1 treatment decreased MPO, followed by a rapid resolution of inflammation characterized by a decrease in cytokines. At the matured stage, AM/AMBP-1 treatment increased the alpha smooth muscle actin expression (mature blood vessels) and Masson-Trichrome staining (collagen deposition) along the granulation area, and increased MMP-9 and decreased MMP-2 mRNA expressions. TGFβ-1 mRNA levels in AM/AMBP-1 group were 5.3 times lower than those in the vehicle group. AM/AMBP-1 accelerated wound healing by promoting angiogenesis, collagen deposition and remodeling. Treatment also shortened the days to reach plateau for wound closure. Thus, AM/AMBP-1 may be further developed as a therapeutic for cutaneous wound healing.
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spelling pubmed-43635602015-03-23 Combination of Adrenomedullin with Its Binding Protein Accelerates Cutaneous Wound Healing Idrovo, Juan-Pablo Yang, Weng-Lang Jacob, Asha Ajakaiye, Michael A. Cheyuo, Cletus Wang, Zhimin Prince, Jose M. Nicastro, Jeffrey Coppa, Gene F. Wang, Ping PLoS One Research Article Cutaneous wound continues to cause significant morbidity and mortality in the setting of diseases such as diabetes and cardiovascular diseases. Despite advances in wound care management, there is still an unmet medical need exists for efficient therapy for cutaneous wound. Combined treatment of adrenomedullin (AM) and its binding protein-1 (AMBP-1) is protective in various disease conditions. To examine the effect of the combination treatment of AM and AMBP-1 on cutaneous wound healing, full-thickness 2.0-cm diameter circular excision wounds were surgically created on the dorsum of rats, saline (vehicle) or AM/AMBP-1 (96/320 μg kg BW) was topically applied to the wound daily and wound size measured. At days 3, 7, and 14, skin samples were collected from the wound sites. AM/AMBP-1 treated group had significantly smaller wound surface area than the vehicle group over the 14-day time course. At day 3, AM/AMBP-1 promoted neutrophil infiltration (MPO), increased cytokine levels (IL-6 and TNF-α), angiogenesis (CD31, VEGF and TGFβ-1) and cell proliferation (Ki67). By day 7 and 14, AM/AMBP-1 treatment decreased MPO, followed by a rapid resolution of inflammation characterized by a decrease in cytokines. At the matured stage, AM/AMBP-1 treatment increased the alpha smooth muscle actin expression (mature blood vessels) and Masson-Trichrome staining (collagen deposition) along the granulation area, and increased MMP-9 and decreased MMP-2 mRNA expressions. TGFβ-1 mRNA levels in AM/AMBP-1 group were 5.3 times lower than those in the vehicle group. AM/AMBP-1 accelerated wound healing by promoting angiogenesis, collagen deposition and remodeling. Treatment also shortened the days to reach plateau for wound closure. Thus, AM/AMBP-1 may be further developed as a therapeutic for cutaneous wound healing. Public Library of Science 2015-03-17 /pmc/articles/PMC4363560/ /pubmed/25781901 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0120225 Text en © 2015 Idrovo et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Idrovo, Juan-Pablo
Yang, Weng-Lang
Jacob, Asha
Ajakaiye, Michael A.
Cheyuo, Cletus
Wang, Zhimin
Prince, Jose M.
Nicastro, Jeffrey
Coppa, Gene F.
Wang, Ping
Combination of Adrenomedullin with Its Binding Protein Accelerates Cutaneous Wound Healing
title Combination of Adrenomedullin with Its Binding Protein Accelerates Cutaneous Wound Healing
title_full Combination of Adrenomedullin with Its Binding Protein Accelerates Cutaneous Wound Healing
title_fullStr Combination of Adrenomedullin with Its Binding Protein Accelerates Cutaneous Wound Healing
title_full_unstemmed Combination of Adrenomedullin with Its Binding Protein Accelerates Cutaneous Wound Healing
title_short Combination of Adrenomedullin with Its Binding Protein Accelerates Cutaneous Wound Healing
title_sort combination of adrenomedullin with its binding protein accelerates cutaneous wound healing
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4363560/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25781901
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0120225
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