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Defects in wound closure can be related to the failure of keratinocytes to re-epithelize. Potential mechanisms driving this impairment comprise unbalanced cytokine signaling, including Transforming Growth Factor-β (TFG-β). Although the etiologies of chronic wound development are known, the relevant molecular events are poorly understood. This lack of insight is a consequence of ethical issues, which limit the available evidence to humans. In this work, we have used an in vitro model validated for the study of epidermal physiology and function, the HaCaT cells to provide a description of the impact of sustained exposure to TGF-β. Long term TGF-β1 treatment led to evident changes, HaCaT cells became spindle-shaped and increased in size. This phenotype change involved conformational re-arrangements for actin filaments and E-Cadherin cell-adhesion structures. Surprisingly, the signs of consolidated epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition were absent. At the molecular level, modified gene expression and altered protein contents were found. Non-canonical TGF-β pathway elements did not show relevant changes. However, R-Smads experienced alterations best characterized by decreased Smad3 levels. Functionally, HaCaT cells exposed to TGF-β1 for long periods showed cell-cycle arrest. Yet, the strength of this restraint weakens the longer the treatment, as revealed when challenged by pro-mitogenic factors. The proposed setting might offer a useful framework for future research on the mechanisms driving wound chronification.
Defects in wound closure can be related to the failure of keratinocytes to re-epithelize. Potential mechanisms driving this impairment comprise unbalanced cytokine signaling, including Transforming Growth Factor-β (TFG-β). Although the etiologies of chronic wound development are known, the relevant molecular events are poorly understood. This lack of insight is a consequence of ethical issues, which limit the available evidence to humans. In this work, we have used an in vitro model validated for the study of epidermal physiology and function, the HaCaT cells to provide a description of the impact of sustained exposure to TGF-β. Long term TGF-β1 treatment led to evident changes, HaCaT cells became spindle-shaped and increased in size. This phenotype change involved conformational re-arrangements for actin filaments and E-Cadherin cell-adhesion structures. Surprisingly, the signs of consolidated epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition were absent. At the molecular level, modified gene expression and altered protein contents were found. Non-canonical TGF-β pathway elements did not show relevant changes. However, R-Smads experienced alterations best characterized by decreased Smad3 levels. Functionally, HaCaT cells exposed to TGF-β1 for long periods showed cell-cycle arrest. Yet, the strength of this restraint weakens the longer the treatment, as revealed when challenged by pro-mitogenic factors. The proposed setting might offer a useful framework for future research on the mechanisms driving wound chronification.
Unsuccessful wound closure in chronic wounds can be linked to altered keratinocyte activation and their inability to re-epithelize. Suggested mechanisms driving this impairment involve unbalanced cytokine signaling. However, the molecular events leading to these aberrant responses are poorly understood. Among cytokines affecting keratinocyte responses, Transforming Growth Factor-β (TFG-β) is thought to have a great impact. In this study, we have used a previously characterized skin epidermal in vitro model, HaCaT cells continuously exposed to TGF-β1, to study the wound recovery capabilities of chronified/senescent keratinocytes. In this setting, chronified keratinocytes show decreased migration and reduced activation in response to injury. Amniotic membrane (AM) has been used successfully to manage unresponsive complicated wounds. In our in vitro setting, AM treatment of chronified keratinocytes re-enabled migration in the early stages of wound healing, also promoting proliferation at later stages. Interestingly, when checking the gene expression of markers known to be altered in TGF-β chronified cells and involved in cell cycle regulation, early migratory responses, senescence, and chronic inflammation, we discovered that AM treatment seemed to reset back to keratinocyte status. The analysis of the evolution of both the levels of keratinocyte activation marker cytokeratin 17 and the spatial-temporal expression pattern of the proliferation marker Ki-67 in human in vivo biopsy samples suggests that responses to AM recorded in TGF-β chronified HaCaT cells would be homologous to those of resident keratinocytes in chronic wounds. All these results provide further evidence that sustained TGF-β might play a key role in wound chronification and postulate the validity of our TGF-β chronified HaCaT in vitro model for the study of chronic wound physiology.
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