Affiliation:
1. Department of Dermatology, Jena University Hospital Friedrich Schiller University Jena Germany
2. Dirksen Consulting Frankfurt am Main Germany
Abstract
AbstractBackgroundLight therapy is widely used in medicine. Specifically, photobiomodulation has been shown to exert beneficial effects in wound healing disorders, which present a major challenge in health care. The study's aim was providing information on the effect of a novel, red‐laser‐based wound therapy device (WTD) on keratinocytes and fibroblasts during wound healing under optimal and non‐optimal conditions.MethodsThe scratch wound assay was employed as a wound healing model for mechanical damage with readjustment of specific cell milieus, explicitly chronic TH1 inflammation and TH2‐dominant conditions. Furthermore, gene expression analysis of pro‐inflammatory cytokines (IL1A, IL6, CXCL8), growth factors (TGFB1, PDGFC), transcription factors (NFKB1, TP53) and heat shock proteins (HSP90AA1, HSPA1A, HSPD1) as well as desmogleins (DSG1, DSG3) in keratinocytes and collagen (COL1A1, COL3A1) in fibroblasts was performed after WTD treatment.ResultsIt was shown that WTD treatment is biocompatible and supports scratch wound closure under non‐optimal conditions. A distinct enhancement of desmoglein and collagen gene expression as well as induction of early growth factor gene expression was observed under chronic inflammatory conditions. Moreover, WTD increased HSPD1 transcript levels in keratinocytes and augmented collagen expression in fibroblasts during wound healing under TH2 conditions. WTD treatment also alleviated the inflammatory response in keratinocytes and induced early growth factor gene expression in fibroblasts under physiological conditions.ConclusionPositive effects described for wound treatment with WTD could be replicated in vitro and seem to be to be conferred by a direct influence on cellular processes taking place in keratinocytes and fibroblasts during wound healing.
Subject
Dermatology,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging,Immunology,General Medicine,Immunology and Allergy
Cited by
2 articles.
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