| Literature DB >> 33228152 |
Stephen Kirchner1,2, Vivian Lei1,3, Amanda S MacLeod1,2,3,4,5.
Abstract
The skin represents the first line of defense and innate immune protection against pathogens. Skin normally provides a physical barrier to prevent infection by pathogens; however, wounds, microinjuries, and minor barrier impediments can present open avenues for invasion through the skin. Accordingly, wound repair and protection from invading pathogens are essential processes in successful skin barrier regeneration. To repair and protect wounds, skin promotes the development of a specific and complex immunological microenvironment within and surrounding the disrupted tissue. This immune microenvironment includes both innate and adaptive processes, including immune cell recruitment to the wound and secretion of extracellular factors that can act directly to promote wound closure and wound antimicrobial defense. Recent work has shown that this immune microenvironment also varies according to the specific context of the wound: the microbiome, neuroimmune signaling, environmental effects, and age play roles in altering the innate immune response to wounding. This review will focus on the role of these factors in shaping the cutaneous microenvironment and how this ultimately impacts the immune response to wounding.Entities:
Keywords: innate immunity; skin; wounding
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33228152 PMCID: PMC7699544 DOI: 10.3390/ijms21228748
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 6.208
Figure 1Host–microbe cross talk informs the immune microenvironment of wounds. A number of different microbes, including various bacteria, viruses, and fungi, can directly impact wound healing and alter the immune microenvironment. Upon wounding, whether by trauma, arthropod bite, or chronic barrier disruption, skin-resident bacteria, viruses, and fungi all can impact the microenvironment of the healing tissue. Several general and specific examples of this microenvironment interaction have been elucidated recently. Paradoxically, germ-free mice exhibit accelerated wound closure when compared to conventionally raised mice [54]. Other specific microbes have distinct effects on immune cells, including Staphylococcus aureus, which creates beta-barrel forming toxins to impair macrophage function in the wound [58], or Candida albicans, which also disrupts normal macrophage action [59]. While not a direct immune cell effect, other pathogens can impact the microenvironment, hijacking or colonizing wounds directly, including papillomavirus [60] and Pseudomonas species [61]. Skin commensal microbes such as Staphylococcus epidermidis can promote immune defenses in the wound [57] via phenol-soluble modulins. This provides a snapshot of the various roles of microbes in the wound microenvironment but is not exhaustive. Further study is needed to fully understand the skin microbiome–wound microenvironment interaction. Figure created using BioRender.
Key factors in the innate immune microenvironment that impact wounds.
| Microenvironment Component | Outcome(s) | Reference(s) | |
|---|---|---|---|
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| Neural Sensation | Denervated skin heals at slower rates; | [ |
| TRPV1 nerve fibers activate host immune defenses | [ | ||
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| Wound Location | Immune cell numbers vary with body site | [ |
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| Age | Elderly Skin heals slower than younger skin; | [ |
| Inflammation/repair spectrum is impaired in aged skin | [ | ||
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| Cutaneous Bacteria | Microbiome deletion potentiates wound closure; | [ |
| Commensal microbes can promote antimicrobial defense; | [ | ||
| Microbiome is altered in chronic, non-healing wounds | [ | ||
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| Cutaneous Fungus | Cutaneous fungal communities are predictive of wound healing time | [ |
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| Cutaneous Virus | IL-27 promotes antiviral defense and healing in cutaneous wounds | [ |
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| Moisture | Emollients can promote antibacterial defenses; | [ |
| Skin moisture levels directly impact wound healing rate | [ | ||
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| UV Radiation | UVB radiation activates Type I interferon responses; | [ |
| UVB radiation can directly stimulate wound healing | [ | ||
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| Time of Wound | Fibroblast migration and wound healing varies with time of wound | [ |
Figure 2Variables affecting the cutaneous immune microenvironment of wounds. Environmental impacts, such as skin moisture, ultraviolet (UV) exposure, timing of wounding and location of the wound, can all modulate immune responses to barrier disruption. Skin moisture levels can alter immune expression of antimicrobial proteins [76] as well as immune cell infiltration [79]. UV exposure can promote wound closure [84], as well as interferon signature [83]. Time of day can alter fibroblast activity in the wound [85], as well as immune cell trafficking [86]. The location of the wound on the body matters as well, as various immune cells differ in proportion throughout the body dependent on the location [80]. Finally, aging plays a major role in the microenvironment of wounds; aged skin is deficient in neutrophil and macrophage recruitment [87] and is also slower to re-epithelialize [88]. Figure created using Biorender.