| Literature DB >> 28634413 |
Maxwell B Johnson1,2, Brandon Pang1,2, Daniel J Gardner1,2, Solmaz Niknam-Benia1,2, Vinaya Soundarajan1,2, Athanasios Bramos1,2, David P Perrault1,2, Kian Banks1,2, Gene K Lee1,2, Regina Y Baker1,2, Gene H Kim3, Sunju Lee1,2,4,5, Yang Chai6, Mei Chen3,5, Wei Li3,5, Lawrence Kwong7, Young-Kwon Hong1,2,4,5, Alex K Wong8,9.
Abstract
Wound healing is significantly delayed in irradiated skin. To better understand global changes in protein expression after radiation, we utilized a reverse phase protein array (RPPA) to identify significant changes in paired samples of normal and irradiated human skin. Of the 210 proteins studied, fibronectin was the most significantly and consistently downregulated in radiation-damaged skin. Using a murine model, we confirmed that radiation leads to decreased fibronectin expression in the skin as well as delayed wound healing. Topically applied fibronectin was found to significantly improve wound healing in irradiated skin and was associated with decreased inflammatory infiltrate and increased angiogenesis. Fibronectin treatment may be a useful adjunctive modality in the treatment of non-healing radiation wounds.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28634413 PMCID: PMC5478660 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-017-03614-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1(A) Photo of a patient with a non-healing lower extremity wound. Note the skin discoloration associated with radiation injury. (B) Representative example of H&E (left) and Sirius red (right) staining of paired normal (top) and irradiated (bottom) human skin samples, demonstrating abnormally thick stratum corneum (a), thin epidermis (b), disordered collagen (c), and chronic inflammatory cells (d) characteristic of radiation-induced skin damage. Scale bars represent 100 µm.
Figure 2(A) Heat map of reverse phase protein array of paired irradiated and non-irradiated human skin samples. Samples are listed by date collected and labeled NML (normal) or XRT (radiated). Green corresponds to higher and red to lower relative expression. (B) Cropped Western blot of fibronectin expression in four pairs of human skin samples. (C) Relative quantification of fibronectin gene expression in paired human skin samples by qRT-PCR.
Figure 3(A) Flow diagram for experimental methodology. (B) qRT-PCR demonstrating that fibronectin expression is significantly downregulated after radiation of mouse skin 4–6 weeks after exposure. (C) Irradiated skin heals significantly slower than normal skin at all time points (p < 0.05). (D) Representative normal (top) and irradiated (bottom) wounds at days 0, 12, and 24 post-wounding. (E) Topical application of fibronectin at the time of wounding is associated with significantly accelerated wound healing at all time points (p < 0.05). (F) Representative radiated wounds with vehicle control (top) and fibronectin treatment (bottom) at days 0, 14, and 21.
Figure 4Relative quantification of (A) TGF-β and (B) SMAD3 expression in irradiated and non-irradiated murine skin samples, quantified by RT-PCR.
Figure 5Histological analysis of control and fibronectin-treated radiated wounds. (A) H&E. (B) Sirius red reveals increased fascicular and horizontal collagen deposition in fibronectin-treated wounds. (C) Anti-MPO IHC shows fewer neutrophils in fibronectin-treated wounds. (D) Anti-F4/80 IHC demonstrates fewer macrophages in fibronectin-treated wounds. (E) Anti-CD31 IHC demonstrates increased endothelial cell presences in fibronectin-treated wounds. Scale bars represent 50 µm.
Primers utilized for RT-PCR.
| Primer | Forward | Reverse |
|---|---|---|
| Human Actb | AAGTCAGTGTACAGGTAAGCC | GTCCCCCAACTTGAGATGTATG |
| Human Fn1 | ACCATCTTGTAGGACTGACC | CGTCCTAAAGACTCCATGATCTG |
| Murine Actb | GTACGACCAGAGGCATACAG | CTGAACCCTAAGGCCAACC |
| Murine Fn1 | GAGCTATCCATTTCACCTTCAGA | TTGTTCGTAGACACTGGAGAC |
| Murine Tgfb1 | CCGAATGTCTGACGTATTGAAGA | GCGGACTACTATGCTAAAGAGG |
| Murine Smad3 | GCGGCACGTAGATAACGTGAG | GAACACCAAGTGCATTACCATC |