| Literature DB >> 35160339 |
Laura Rehak1, Laura Giurato2, Marco Meloni2, Andrea Panunzi2, Giada Maria Manti1, Luigi Uccioli2.
Abstract
Monocytes and lymphocytes play a key role in physiologic wound healing and might be involved in the impaired mechanisms observed in diabetes. Skin wound macrophages are represented by tissue resident macrophages and infiltrating peripheral blood recruited monocytes which play a leading role during the inflammatory phase of wound repair. The impaired transition of diabetic wound macrophages from pro-inflammatory M1 phenotypes to anti-inflammatory pro-regenerative M2 phenotypes might represent a key issue for impaired diabetic wound healing. This review will focus on the role of immune system cells in normal skin and diabetic wound repair. Furthermore, it will give an insight into therapy able to immuno-modulate wound healing processes toward to a regenerative anti-inflammatory fashion. Different approaches, such as cell therapy, exosome, and dermal substitute able to promote the M1 to M2 switch and able to positively influence healing processes in chronic wounds will be discussed.Entities:
Keywords: diabetic foot; immune system; lymphocytes; macrophage polarization; monocytes; tissue regeneration; wound healing
Year: 2022 PMID: 35160339 PMCID: PMC8836882 DOI: 10.3390/jcm11030889
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Med ISSN: 2077-0383 Impact factor: 4.241
Figure 1The healing wound: (a) Platelets form a fibrin clot, and chemo-attractants are released to recruit inflammatory cells (neutrophils and mast cells), releasing pro-inflammatory cytokines. NETosis (Neutrophil Extracellular Trap) helps to capture and destroy pathogens. Tissue-resident macrophages react to pathogen- and damage-associated molecular patterns (PAMPs and DAMPs). First wave of monocytes differentiates in M1(phagocytoses step). (b) After the resolution of inflammation, the proliferative phase starts. Angiogenesis develops via vessel sprouting. Infiltrating monocytes differentiate into M1 and M2 macrophage subsets. M1 macrophages maintain a strong inflammatory profile releasing inflammatory cytokines and ROS and eating dead bacteria and neutrophils. After M1 polarize in M2 pro-regenerative phenotype which release anti-inflammatory cytokines, growth factors, and proteases which replace the provisional ECM with collagens, induce fibroblasts proliferation, and induce new vessel formation. This process results in granular tissue and keratinocyte coverage. (c) Remodeling is supported by macrophages, fibroblasts, and myofibroblasts re-organizing the provisional ECM into a definitive healed tissue, principally through matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs) and their inhibitors (TIMPs), resulting in tissue with strong tensile strength and functionality. Angiogenesis is almost complete, and macrophages produce molecule bypass (fusion) between newly formed vessels, creating a functional network.
Figure 2The diabetic wound: (a) Impaired wounds showed an upregulated influx of neutrophils and mast cells, leading to an intense inflammatory response, causing collateral damage, and extending the inflammatory phase to subsequent phases. The persistent higher release of inflammatory cytokines produces M1 activation with further release of inflammatory substances. (b) Monocyte recruitments are poor due to arterial occlusion and impaired microcirculation. Poor angiogenesis and glycated proteins result in an impaired fibroblast activity. The hypoxic environment brings oxidative stress, driving inflammatory M1 macrophage polarization and impairment of fibroblasts, resulting in poor ECM reorganization and a persistent inflammatory environment. The polarization in M2 is absent or extremely poor, causing a further accumulation of M1. (c) Impaired wound-resident cells remain ineffective and in an inflammatory condition. Collagen reorganization resolves poorly, resulting in weak, non-functional skin that can re-injure and potentially ulcerate, perpetually inflamed. Macrophages are still activated in the inflammatory phenotype M1. The wound does not heal.
Figure 3How to switch to M2: strategies.
Immune-Cell-based Cell Therapy—Clinical trials on diabetic patients.
| Description | Result | Ref. | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Zuloff-Shani et al. 2004 | Treatment of chronic ulcers with blood-derived macrophages activated by hypo-osmotic shock in over 1000 patients | Reduction of the healing time, reduction of risk of complications and morbidity. Improvement of the quality of life for long-suffering patients | [ |
| Danon et al. | Decubital ulcers of 72 patients (average age 82), were treated by local injection of macrophages prepared from a blood unit in a closed sterile system. The remaining 127 patients (average age 79) were treated conventionally and served as controls. No exclusion criteria were applied. | In the macrophage-treated group, 27% healed, while only 6% healed in the control group ( | [ |
| Zuloff-Shani et al. 2010 | 100 consecutive elderly patients with a total of 216 stage III or IV pressure ulcers, 66 patients were assigned to the autologous macrophages group, 38 patients were assigned to the standard care treatments (38 patients.) | Percentage of completely closed wounds (wound level and patient level) were significantly better ( | [ |
| Moriya, J et al. | Retrospective study on 42 patients with severe intermittent claudication, ischemic rest pain, or non-healing ischemic ulcers caused by peripheral arterial disease, including thromboangiitis obliterans, and who had not responded to conventional therapy that included nonsurgical and surgical revascularization (no option). | Improvement of ischemic symptoms was observed in 60% to 70% of the patients. The annual rate of major amputation was decreased significantly by treatment. The survival rate of younger responders was better than that of non-responders. | [ |
| Huang, P.P et al. | 150 patients with peripheral arterial disease were randomised to mobilized PBMNC 76 cases or BMMNC 74 cases implanted, follow up for 12 weeks. Primary outcomes were safety and efficacy of treatment, based on ankle-brachial index (ABI) and rest pain | Significant improvement of the ABI, skin temperature and rest pain was observed in both groups after transplantation and was better I PBMNC group. However, there was no significant difference between two groups for pain-free walking distance, transcutaneous oxygen pressure, ulcers, and rate of lower limb amputation | [ |
| Liotta, F et al. | Autologous Non-Mobilized Enriched Circulating Endothelial Progenitors obtained from non-mobilized peripheral blood by immunomagnetic selection of CD14+ and CD34+ cells) or BM-MNC were injected into the gastrocnemius of the affected limb in 23 and 17 patients with no option critical limb ischemia. | After 2 yrs follow-up, both groups showed significant and progressive improvement in muscle perfusion (primary endpoint), rest pain, consumption of analgesics, pain-free walking distance, wound healing, quality of life, ankle-brachial index, toe-brachial index, and transcutaneous PO2 | [ |
| Dubsky, M et al. | 28 patients with diabetic foot disease (17 treated by bone marrow cells and 11 by peripheral blood mononuclear cell) were included into an active group and 22 patients into a control group without cell treatment. | The transcutaneous oxygen pressure increased significantly ( | [ |
| Persiani, F. et al. | 50 diabetic patients affected by CLI underwent PBMNCs implant (32 patients underwent PBMNCs therapy associated with endovascular revascularization, 18 patients, non-option CLI) | The follow-up period was 10 months. In the PBMNC group + revascularization | [ |
| De Angelis, B et al. | Prospective, not randomized study based on a treated group who did not | The A-PBMNC-treated group showed a statistically significant improvement of limb rescue of 95.3% versus 52.2% of the control group ( | [ |
| Dubsky et al. | 31 patients with DFU and CLI treated by autologous stem cells and 30 patients treated by PTA were included in the | Amputation-free survival after 6 and 12 months was significantly greater in the cell therapy and PTA groups compared with | [ |
| Scatena et al. | The study included 76 NO-CLI patients with DFUs. All patients were treated with the same standard care (control group), but 38 patients were also treated | Only 4 out 38 amputations (10.5%) were observed | [ |
| Di Vieste et al. | Case report of a 59-year-old patient with type 2 diabetes mellitus who had a gangrene of the right toe. After an ineffective angioplasty, it was decided to use a PBMNC therapy. | The patient underwent to amputation of the first necrotic toe and three PBMNC treatment sessions with complete surgical wound healing and limb rescue | [ |
Dermal Substitutes tested for immunomodulatory and macrophage polarization ability.
| Primary Material | Source and Other Components | Refs. | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Nevelia | Porous resorbable double layer matrix 2 mm thickness made of stabilized native collagen type I and a silicone sheet 200 mm thickness mechanically reinforced with a polyester fabric. | Bovine, Native collagen Type I. | [ |
| Integra | Bilayer system for skin replacement made of a porous matrix of fibers of cross-linked bovine tendon collagen and glycosaminoglycan (chondroitin-6-sulfate) that is manufactured with a controlled porosity and defined degradation rate. | Bovine Tendon | [ |
| PriMatrix | Acellular dermal tissue matrix. comprising of | Fetal Bovine collagen type I and type III collagen. | [ |
| Oasis | Lyophilized, decellularized porcine small intestine | Porcine small intestine | [ |
| Allomend | Decellularized donated human dermal tissue, | Human dermal tissue | [ |
| DermaMatrix | Cadaveric human allograft treated with a disinfectant solution that combines detergents with acidic and antiseptic reagents. | Human dermal tissue | [ |
| Dermacell | Decellularized regenerative human tissue matrix allograft processed using proprietary technology that removes at least 97% of donor DNA without compromising the desired biomechanical structure or biochemical properties. | Human dermal tissue | [ |