Antler stem cell-derived exosomes promote regenerative wound healing via fibroblast-to-myofibroblast transition inhibition

Author:

Zhang Guokun,Wang Dongxu,Ren Jing,Li Jiping,Guo Qianqian,Shi Liyan,Li ChunyiORCID

Abstract

Abstract Introduction The typical outcome of mammalian wound healing is scarring, a fibrotic process mediated by myofibroblast aggregation. Perfect healing in a clinical setting is relatively unexplored. Surprisingly, our previous studies have shown that the large wound (10 cm diameter or more) of the pedicle of deer naturally achieves regenerative restoration, realized through a paracrine pathway from adjacent antler stem cells (AnSCs). Methods AnSC-derived exosomes (AnSC-exos) were topically injected around the full-thickness wounds in a rat model. The effects on the rate of wound healing and the quality of healing were evaluated via morphological, histological, and molecular biological techniques on days 14 and 28 after surgery. Results The results showed that AnSC-exos significantly accelerated the rate of wound healing and improved healing quality, including regeneration of cutaneous appendages (hair follicles and sebaceous glands) and the distribution pattern of collagen (basket-weave-like) in the healed skin. These effects of AnSC-exos were comparable to those of AnSCs but were significantly more potent than those of exosomes derived from bone marrow mesenchymal stem cells (bMSC-exos). Furthermore, AnSC-exos treatment effectively inhibited fibroblast-to-myofibroblast transition (FMT), as evidenced by the reduction of full-thickness skin injury-induced FMT in vivo and TGF-β1-induced FMT in vitro. Conclusion AnSC-exos could effectively promote regenerative cutaneous wound healing, highly likely through FMT inhibition. This suggests that AnSC-exos treatment could provide the potential for a novel approach to induce regenerative wound healing in the clinical setting. Graphical Abstract

Funder

Natural Science Foundation of Jilin Province

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Doctoral Research Start-Up Fund of Changchun Sci-Tech University

Young Scientific and Technological Talents Support Project of Jilin Province

Independent Innovation Capacity Construction Project of Jilin Province

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Cell Biology,Molecular Biology,Biomedical Engineering,Environmental Engineering

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