| Literature DB >> 34287312 |
Hans-Oliver Rennekampff1, Ziyad Alharbi2.
Abstract
Cutaneous burn injury is associated with epidermal loss in the zone of coagulation zone and delayed tissue loss in the zone of stasis. Thus, thermal stress can trigger both necrosis and regulated cell death (RCD) or apoptosis. Experimental in vitro and in vivo work has clearly demonstrated apoptotic events of thermally injured keratinocytes that are accompanied by morphological and biochemical markers of regulated cell death. However, in vivo data for the different pathways of regulated cell death are sparse. In vitro experiments with heat-stressed human keratinocytes have demonstrated death receptor involvement (extrinsic apoptosis), calcium influx, and disruption of mitochondrial membrane potential (intrinsic apoptosis) in regulated cell death. In addition, caspase-independent pathways have been suggested in regulated cell death. Keratinocyte heat stress leads to reduced proliferation, possibly as a result of reduced keratinocyte adhesion (anoikis) or oncogene involvement. Understanding the underlying mechanisms of RCD and the skin's responses to thermal stress may lead to improved strategies for treating cutaneous burn trauma.Entities:
Keywords: apoptosis; burn; cell death; keratinocyte; review; wound
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34287312 PMCID: PMC8293431 DOI: 10.3390/medsci9030051
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Med Sci (Basel) ISSN: 2076-3271
Figure 1(a) Staining of thermally stress keratinocytes at 47 °C after 72 h. Viable cells have intense green fluorescence (arrow head). Apoptotic cells with reduced green fluorescence and condensed red fluorescence (arrow). Homogenous red fluorescence indicative for necrotic cells (star); (b) percentage of live, apoptotic, and dead keratinocytes after thermal stress for 5 min at the given temperature analysed by acridine orange/ethidiumbromide, indicating a sharp increase in necrotic cells above 50 °C and decrease in viability. Apoptotic keratinocytes were mainly observed at moderate temperatures; (c) percentage of live, apoptotic, and dead keratinocytes after thermal stress for 5 min at the given temperature analysed by acridine orange/ethidiumbromide after 72 h; notice the increase in apoptotic keratinocytes at moderate temperatures.
Figure 2Signal transduction leading to apoptosis. Various cellular stress, e.g., matrix disruption, death receptor activation, transient vanilloid receptor (TRPV) opening, protein misfolding may initiate apoptotic pathways in keratinocytes. ECM extracellular matrix; BM basement membrane; dotted line indicating activation after integrin internalisation.
Postburn interventions aimed at reducing thermally induced apoptosis.
| Intervention | Effect | Burn Model | Timing | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Human amniotic MSC | Decreased TUNEL staining | mouse | postburn | Li et al. [ |
| Inhibitor of c-jun | Decreased cell death | mouse | potburn | Giles et al. [ |
| Rapamycin | Decreased TUNEL staining | rat | postburn | Xiao et al. [ |
| Methylene Blue | Reduced necrosis | rat | postburn | Rosique et al. [ |
| Granzyme B inhibitor | Improved healing | mouse | postburn | Shen et al. [ |
| Hsp90α fragment F-5 | Reduced caspase 3 staining | pig | postburn | Bhatia et al. [ |
| Platelet Rich Plasma | Reduced TUNEL | rabbits | postburn | Uraloğlu et al. [ |
| Astaxanthin | Reduced TUNEL staining, reduced cytochrome C and caspase 9 | postburn | Fang et al. [ | |
| Melatonin | Reduced caspase 3 staining | rat | postburn | Zhang et al. [ |
| p38MAPK inhibition | Reduced TUNEL | rat | postburn | Ipaktchi et al. [ |
MSC-mesenchymal stem cells, TUNEL TdT-mediated dUTP biotin nick end-labelling.