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Publication : β-Catenin-regulated myeloid cell adhesion and migration determine wound healing.

First Author  Amini-Nik S Year  2014
Journal  J Clin Invest Volume  124
Issue  6 Pages  2599-610
PubMed ID  24837430 Mgi Jnum  J:212902
Mgi Id  MGI:5582517 Doi  10.1172/JCI62059
Citation  Amini-Nik S, et al. (2014) beta-Catenin-regulated myeloid cell adhesion and migration determine wound healing. J Clin Invest 124(6):2599-610
abstractText  A beta-catenin/T cell factor-dependent transcriptional program is critical during cutaneous wound repair for the regulation of scar size; however, the relative contribution of beta-catenin activity and function in specific cell types in the granulation tissue during the healing process is unknown. Here, cell lineage tracing revealed that cells in which beta-catenin is transcriptionally active express a gene profile that is characteristic of the myeloid lineage. Mice harboring a macrophage-specific deletion of the gene encoding beta-catenin exhibited insufficient skin wound healing due to macrophage-specific defects in migration, adhesion to fibroblasts, and ability to produce TGF-beta1. In irradiated mice, only macrophages expressing beta-catenin were able to rescue wound-healing deficiency. Evaluation of scar tissue collected from patients with hypertrophic and normal scars revealed a correlation between the number of macrophages within the wound, beta-catenin levels, and cellularity. Our data indicate that beta-catenin regulates myeloid cell motility and adhesion and that beta-catenin-mediated macrophage motility contributes to the number of mesenchymal cells and ultimate scar size following cutaneous injury.
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