| Literature DB >> 33462494 |
Gabi Schutzius1, Christian Kolter1, Sebastian Bergling1, Federico Tortelli1, Florian Fuchs1, Steffen Renner1, Vito Guagnano1, Simona Cotesta1, Heinrich Rueeger1, Michael Faller1, Laure Bouchez1, Adrian Salathe1, Florian Nigsch1, Shola M Richards1, Malvina Louis1, Viktoria Gruber1, Alexandra Aebi1, Jonathan Turner1, Frederic Grandjean1, Jun Li2, Chris Dimitri2,3, Jason R Thomas2, Markus Schirle2, Jutta Blank1, Peter Drueckes1, Andrea Vaupel1, Ralph Tiedt1, Paul W Manley1, Julia Klopp1, Rene Hemmig1, Florence Zink1, Nelly Leroy1, Walter Carbone1, Guglielmo Roma1, Caroline Gubser Keller1, Natalie Dales2, Armin Beyerbach1, Alfred Zimmerlin1, Debora Bonenfant1, Remi Terranova1, Amy Berwick2, Sukhdeep Sahambi2, Aimee Reynolds2, Lori L Jennings2, Heinz Ruffner1, Peter Tarsa2, Tewis Bouwmeester1, Vickie Driver2, Mathias Frederiksen1, Felix Lohmann4, Susan Kirkland5,6.
Abstract
Although most acute skin wounds heal rapidly, non-healing skin ulcers represent an increasing and substantial unmet medical need that urgently requires effective therapeutics. Keratinocytes resurface wounds to re-establish the epidermal barrier by transitioning to an activated, migratory state, but this ability is lost in dysfunctional chronic wounds. Small-molecule regulators of keratinocyte plasticity with the potential to reverse keratinocyte malfunction in situ could offer a novel therapeutic approach in skin wound healing. Utilizing high-throughput phenotypic screening of primary keratinocytes, we identify such small molecules, including bromodomain and extra-terminal domain (BET) protein family inhibitors (BETi). BETi induce a sustained activated, migratory state in keratinocytes in vitro, increase activation markers in human epidermis ex vivo and enhance skin wound healing in vivo. Our findings suggest potential clinical utility of BETi in promoting keratinocyte re-epithelialization of skin wounds. Importantly, this novel property of BETi is exclusively observed after transient low-dose exposure, revealing new potential for this compound class.Entities:
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Year: 2021 PMID: 33462494 DOI: 10.1038/s41589-020-00716-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Chem Biol ISSN: 1552-4450 Impact factor: 15.040