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Publication : Injury-activated glial cells promote wound healing of the adult skin in mice.

First Author  Parfejevs V Year  2018
Journal  Nat Commun Volume  9
Issue  1 Pages  236
PubMed ID  29339718 Mgi Jnum  J:257726
Mgi Id  MGI:6114963 Doi  10.1038/s41467-017-01488-2
Citation  Parfejevs V, et al. (2018) Injury-activated glial cells promote wound healing of the adult skin in mice. Nat Commun 9(1):236
abstractText  Cutaneous wound healing is a complex process that aims to re-establish the original structure of the skin and its functions. Among other disorders, peripheral neuropathies are known to severely impair wound healing capabilities of the skin, revealing the importance of skin innervation for proper repair. Here, we report that peripheral glia are crucially involved in this process. Using a mouse model of wound healing, combined with in vivo fate mapping, we show that injury activates peripheral glia by promoting de-differentiation, cell-cycle re-entry and dissemination of the cells into the wound bed. Moreover, injury-activated glia upregulate the expression of many secreted factors previously associated with wound healing and promote myofibroblast differentiation by paracrine modulation of TGF-beta signalling. Accordingly, depletion of these cells impairs epithelial proliferation and wound closure through contraction, while their expansion promotes myofibroblast formation. Thus, injury-activated glia and/or their secretome might have therapeutic potential in human wound healing disorders.
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