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Publication : Substance P promotes wound healing in diabetes by modulating inflammation and macrophage phenotype.

First Author  Leal EC Year  2015
Journal  Am J Pathol Volume  185
Issue  6 Pages  1638-48
PubMed ID  25871534 Mgi Jnum  J:221176
Mgi Id  MGI:5638462 Doi  10.1016/j.ajpath.2015.02.011
Citation  Leal EC, et al. (2015) Substance p promotes wound healing in diabetes by modulating inflammation and macrophage phenotype. Am J Pathol 185(6):1638-48
abstractText  Diabetic foot ulceration is a major complication of diabetes. Substance P (SP) is involved in wound healing, but its effect in diabetic skin wounds is unclear. We examined the effect of exogenous SP delivery on diabetic mouse and rabbit wounds. We also studied the impact of deficiency in SP or its receptor, neurokinin-1 receptor, on wound healing in mouse models. SP treatment improved wound healing in mice and rabbits, whereas the absence of SP or its receptor impaired wound progression in mice. Moreover, SP bioavailability in diabetic skin was reduced as SP gene expression was decreased, whereas the gene expression and protein levels of the enzyme that degrades SP, neutral endopeptidase, were increased. Diabetes and SP deficiency were associated with absence of an acute inflammatory response important for wound healing progression and instead revealed a persistent inflammation throughout the healing process. SP treatment induced an acute inflammatory response, which enabled the progression to the proliferative phase and modulated macrophage activation toward the M2 phenotype that promotes wound healing. In conclusion, SP treatment reverses the chronic proinflammatory state in diabetic skin and promotes healing of diabetic wounds.
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