| Literature DB >> 29504231 |
Atsunori Baba1, Shigeto Matsushita1, Kasumi Kitayama2, Tetsuo Asakura2, Hideki Sezutsu3, Akihide Tanimoto4, Takuro Kanekura1.
Abstract
We investigated the effect of silk fibroin (SF) on wound healing in mice. SF or an amorphous SF film (ASFF) prepared from silk produced by the wild-type silkworm Bombyx mori (WT-SF, WT-ASFF) or by transgenic worms that overexpress the Arg-Gly-Asp (RGD) sequence (TG-SF, TG-ASFF) was placed on 5-mm diameter full-thickness skin wounds made by biopsy punch on the back of 8-12 week-old BALB/c mice. Each wound was covered with WT-ASFF and urethane film (UF), TG-ASFF plus UF, or UF alone (control). Wound closure, histological thickness, the area of granulation tissue, and neovascularization were analyzed 4, 8, and 12 days later. The effect of SF on cell migration and proliferation was examined in vitro by scratch- and MTT-assay using human dermal fibroblasts. Wound closure was prompted by TG-ASFF, granulation tissue was thicker and larger in ASFF-treated wounds than the control, and neovascularization was promoted significantly by WT-ASFF. Both assays showed that SF induced the migration and proliferation of human dermal fibroblasts. The effects of TG-ASFF and TG-SF on wound closure, granulation formation, and cell proliferation were more profound than that of WT-ASFF and WT-SF. We document that SF accelerates cutaneous wound healing, and this effect is enhanced with TG-SF.Entities:
Keywords: MAP kinases; RGD; silk fibroin; transgenic silkworm; wound healing
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29504231 DOI: 10.1002/jbm.b.34098
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Biomed Mater Res B Appl Biomater ISSN: 1552-4973 Impact factor: 3.368