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Ly6C Blood Monocyte/Macrophage Drive Chronic Inflammation and Impair Wound Healing in Diabetes Mellitus.

Citation
Kimball, A., et al. “Ly6C Blood Monocyte/Macrophage Drive Chronic Inflammation And Impair Wound Healing In Diabetes Mellitus.”. Arteriosclerosis, Thrombosis, And Vascular Biology, pp. 1102-1114.
Center University of Michigan
Author Andrew Kimball, Matthew Schaller, Amrita Joshi, Frank M Davis, Aaron Dendekker, Anna Boniakowski, Jennifer Bermick, Andrea Obi, Bethany Moore, Peter K Henke, Steve L Kunkel, Katherine A Gallagher
Keywords diabetes mellitus, inflammation, macrophages, monocytes, Wound healing
Abstract

OBJECTIVE: Wound monocyte-derived macrophage plasticity controls the initiation and resolution of inflammation that is critical for proper healing, however, in diabetes mellitus, the resolution of inflammation fails to occur. In diabetic wounds, the kinetics of blood monocyte recruitment and the mechanisms that control in vivo monocyte/macrophage differentiation remain unknown.

APPROACH AND RESULTS: Here, we characterized the kinetics and function of Ly6C [Lin (CD3CD19NK1.1Ter-119) Ly6GCD11b] and Ly6C [Lin (CD3CD19NK1.1Ter-119) Ly6GCD11b] monocyte/macrophage subsets in normal and diabetic wounds. Using flow-sorted -labeled Ly6C monocyte/macrophages, we show Ly6C cells transition to a Ly6C phenotype in normal wounds, whereas in diabetic wounds, there is a late, second influx of Ly6C cells that fail transition to Ly6C. The second wave of Ly6C cells in diabetic wounds corresponded to a spike in MCP-1 (monocyte chemoattractant protein-1) and selective administration of anti-MCP-1 reversed the second Ly6C influx and improved wound healing. To examine the in vivo phenotype of wound monocyte/macrophages, RNA-seq-based transcriptome profiling was performed on flow-sorted Ly6C [LinLy6GCD11b] and Ly6C [LinLy6GCD11b] cells from normal and diabetic wounds. Gene transcriptome profiling of diabetic wound Ly6C cells demonstrated differences in proinflammatory and profibrotic genes compared with controls.

CONCLUSIONS: Collectively, these data identify kinetic and functional differences in diabetic wound monocyte/macrophages and demonstrate that selective targeting of CD11bLy6C monocyte/macrophages is a viable therapeutic strategy for inflammation in diabetic wounds.

Year of Publication
2018
Journal
Arteriosclerosis, thrombosis, and vascular biology
Volume
38
Issue
5
Number of Pages
1102-1114
Date Published
12/2018
ISSN Number
1524-4636
DOI
10.1161/ATVBAHA.118.310703
Alternate Journal
Arterioscler. Thromb. Vasc. Biol.
PMID
29496661
PMCID
PMC5920725
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