Literature DB >> 15293811

Scar-free healing: from embryonic mechanisms to adult therapeutic intervention.

Mark W J Ferguson1, Sharon O'Kane.   

Abstract

In man and domestic animals, scarring in the skin after trauma, surgery, burn or sports injury is a major medical problem, often resulting in adverse aesthetics, loss of function, restriction of tissue movement and/or growth and adverse psychological effects. Current treatments are empirical, unreliable and unpredictable: there are no prescription drugs for the prevention or treatment of dermal scarring. Skin wounds on early mammalian embryos heal perfectly with no scars whereas wounds to adult mammals scar. We investigated the cellular and molecular differences between scar-free healing in embryonic wounds and scar-forming healing in adult wounds. Important differences include the inflammatory response, which in embryonic wounds consists of lower numbers of less differentiated inflammatory cells. This, together with high levels of morphogenetic molecules involved in skin growth and morphogenesis, means that the growth factor profile in a healing embryonic wound is very different from that in an adult wound. Thus, embryonic wounds that heal without a scar have low levels of TGFbeta1 and TGFbeta2, low levels of platelet-derived growth factor and high levels of TGFbeta3. We have experimentally manipulated healing adult wounds in mice, rats and pigs to mimic the scar-free embryonic profile, e.g. neutralizing PDGF, neutralizing TGFbeta1 and TGFbeta2 or adding exogenous TGFbeta3. These experiments result in scar-free wound healing in the adult. Such experiments have allowed the identification of therapeutic targets to which we have developed novel pharmaceutical molecules, which markedly improve or completely prevent scarring during adult wound healing in experimental animals. Some of these new drugs have successfully completed safety and other studies, such that they have entered human clinical trials with approval from the appropriate regulatory authorities. Initial trials involve application of the drug or placebo in a double-blind randomized design, to experimental incision or punch biopsy wounds under the arms of human volunteers. Based on encouraging results from such human volunteer studies, the lead drugs have now entered human patient-based trials e.g. in skin graft donor sites. We consider the evolutionary context of wound healing, scarring and regeneration. We hypothesize that evolutionary pressures have been exerted on intermediate sized, widespread, dirty wounds with considerable tissue damage e.g. bites, bruises and contusions. Modem wounds (e.g. resulting from trauma or surgery) caused by sharp objects and healing in a clean or sterile environment with close tissue apposition are new occurrences, not previously encountered in nature and to which the evolutionary selected wound healing responses are somewhat inappropriate. We also demonstrate that both repair with scarring and regeneration can occur within the same animal, including man, and indeed within the same tissue, thereby suggesting that they share similar mechanisms and regulators. Consequently, by subtly altering the ratio of growth factors present during adult wound healing, we can induce adult wounds to heal perfectly with no scars, with accelerated healing and with no adverse effects, e.g. on wound strength or wound infection rates. This means that scarring may no longer be an inevitable consequence of modem injury or surgery and that a completely new pharmaceutical approach to the prevention of human scarring is now possible. Scarring after injury occurs in many tissues in addition to the skin. Thus scar-improving drugs could have widespread benefits and prevent complications in several tissues, e.g. prevention of blindness after scarring due to eye injury, facilitation of neuronal reconnections in the central and peripheral nervous system by the elimination of glial scarring, restitution of normal gut and reproductive function by preventing strictures and adhesions after injury to the gastrointestinal or reproductive systems, and restoration of locomotor function by preventing scarring in tendons and ligaments.

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Year:  2004        PMID: 15293811      PMCID: PMC1693363          DOI: 10.1098/rstb.2004.1475

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci        ISSN: 0962-8436            Impact factor:   6.237


  34 in total

1.  The segment polarity network is a robust developmental module.

Authors:  G von Dassow; E Meir; E M Munro; G M Odell
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2.  The effects of ageing on wound healing: immunolocalisation of growth factors and their receptors in a murine incisional model.

Authors:  G S Ashcroft; M A Horan; M W Ferguson
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3.  Expression of suppressors of cytokine signaling during liver regeneration.

Authors:  J S Campbell; L Prichard; F Schaper; J Schmitz; A Stephenson-Famy; M E Rosenfeld; G M Argast; P C Heinrich; N Fausto
Journal:  J Clin Invest       Date:  2001-05       Impact factor: 14.808

Review 4.  Liver regeneration.

Authors:  N Fausto
Journal:  J Hepatol       Date:  2000       Impact factor: 25.083

Review 5.  Macrophages in renal inflammation.

Authors:  L P Erwig; D C Kluth; A J Rees
Journal:  Curr Opin Nephrol Hypertens       Date:  2001-05       Impact factor: 2.894

6.  Topical estrogen accelerates cutaneous wound healing in aged humans associated with an altered inflammatory response.

Authors:  G S Ashcroft; T Greenwell-Wild; M A Horan; S M Wahl; M W Ferguson
Journal:  Am J Pathol       Date:  1999-10       Impact factor: 4.307

7.  Aging is associated with reduced deposition of specific extracellular matrix components, an upregulation of angiogenesis, and an altered inflammatory response in a murine incisional wound healing model.

Authors:  G S Ashcroft; M A Horan; M W Ferguson
Journal:  J Invest Dermatol       Date:  1997-04       Impact factor: 8.551

8.  Initial cytokine exposure determines function of macrophages and renders them unresponsive to other cytokines.

Authors:  L P Erwig; D C Kluth; G M Walsh; A J Rees
Journal:  J Immunol       Date:  1998-08-15       Impact factor: 5.422

9.  A new quantitative scale for clinical scar assessment.

Authors:  E Beausang; H Floyd; K W Dunn; C I Orton; M W Ferguson
Journal:  Plast Reconstr Surg       Date:  1998-11       Impact factor: 4.730

10.  Endogenous inflammatory response to dermal wound healing in the fetal and adult mouse.

Authors:  A J Cowin; M P Brosnan; T M Holmes; M W Ferguson
Journal:  Dev Dyn       Date:  1998-07       Impact factor: 3.780

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  177 in total

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Authors:  Christoph Brochhausen; Volker H Schmitt; Constanze N E Planck; Taufiek K Rajab; David Hollemann; Christine Tapprich; Bernhard Krämer; Christian Wallwiener; Helmut Hierlemann; Rolf Zehbe; Heinrich Planck; C James Kirkpatrick
Journal:  J Gastrointest Surg       Date:  2012-06       Impact factor: 3.452

2.  Modelling the interaction of keratinocytes and fibroblasts during normal and abnormal wound healing processes.

Authors:  Shakti N Menon; Jennifer A Flegg; Scott W McCue; Richard C Schugart; Rebecca A Dawson; D L Sean McElwain
Journal:  Proc Biol Sci       Date:  2012-05-23       Impact factor: 5.349

3.  Overcoming endogenous constraints on neuronal regeneration.

Authors:  Nassir Mokarram; Ravi V Bellamkonda
Journal:  IEEE Trans Biomed Eng       Date:  2010-12-30       Impact factor: 4.538

Review 4.  The Northwestern Abdominoplasty Scar Model: A Tool for High-Throughput Assessment of Scar Therapeutics.

Authors:  Ji-Cheng Hsieh; Chitang J Joshi; Rou Wan; Robert D Galiano
Journal:  Adv Wound Care (New Rochelle)       Date:  2020-04-29       Impact factor: 4.730

Review 5.  Similarities and differences between induced organ regeneration in adults and early foetal regeneration.

Authors:  Ioannis V Yannas
Journal:  J R Soc Interface       Date:  2005-12-22       Impact factor: 4.118

6.  Prognosis of full-thickness skin defects in premature infants.

Authors:  Hyung Suk Moon; Jin Sik Burm; Won Yong Yang; Sang Yoon Kang
Journal:  Arch Plast Surg       Date:  2012-09-12

7.  Effect of human Wharton's jelly mesenchymal stem cell paracrine signaling on keloid fibroblasts.

Authors:  Anna I Arno; Saeid Amini-Nik; Patrick H Blit; Mohammed Al-Shehab; Cassandra Belo; Elaine Herer; Marc G Jeschke
Journal:  Stem Cells Transl Med       Date:  2014-01-16       Impact factor: 6.940

8.  Production-scale fibronectin nanofibers promote wound closure and tissue repair in a dermal mouse model.

Authors:  Christophe O Chantre; Patrick H Campbell; Holly M Golecki; Adrian T Buganza; Andrew K Capulli; Leila F Deravi; Stephanie Dauth; Sean P Sheehy; Jeffrey A Paten; Karl Gledhill; Yanne S Doucet; Hasan E Abaci; Seungkuk Ahn; Benjamin D Pope; Jeffrey W Ruberti; Simon P Hoerstrup; Angela M Christiano; Kevin Kit Parker
Journal:  Biomaterials       Date:  2018-03-05       Impact factor: 12.479

Review 9.  Chasing the recipe for a pro-regenerative immune system.

Authors:  James W Godwin; Alexander R Pinto; Nadia A Rosenthal
Journal:  Semin Cell Dev Biol       Date:  2016-08-10       Impact factor: 7.727

10.  Cellular and molecular factors in flexor tendon repair and adhesions: a histological and gene expression analysis.

Authors:  Subhash C Juneja; Edward M Schwarz; Regis J O'Keefe; Hani A Awad
Journal:  Connect Tissue Res       Date:  2013-04-15       Impact factor: 3.417

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