Publications by authors named "Inka Forstreuter"

Tight control of inflammation is required for tissue repair and wound healing and depends on alternative polarization of macrophages as checkpoint for inflammatory resolution. Its perturbations lead to impaired regeneration. Administration of cells/cell factors capable of reversing inflammation and rescuing alternative polarization could be promising for treating inflammatory diseases.

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Integration of biomaterials into tissues is often disturbed by unopposed activation of macrophages. Immediately after implantation, monocytes are attracted from peripheral blood to the implantation site where they differentiate into macrophages. Inflammatory signals from the sterile tissue injury around the implanted biomaterial mediate the differentiation of monocytes into inflammatory M1 macrophages (M1) via autocrine and paracrine mechanisms.

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The sequential phases of biomaterial integration and wound healing require different macrophage functions mediated by distinct macrophage subsets. During the initial phase of healing, pro-inflammatory M1 macrophages (MΦ1) are required to clear the wound from microbes and debris; however, their unopposed, persistent activation often leads to disturbed integration of biomaterials and perturbed wound healing. Here we investigated whether pro-inflammatory macrophage functions are affected by immunomodulatory biomaterials based on artificial extracellular matrices (aECM).

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Regulatory T cells (Treg) have been found to be central for host defense regulation against microbial antigens, the prevention of allergic and autoimmune diseases and the suppression of effective tumor immune responses. However, the influence of the microenvironment and the mechanisms leading to their activation in the periphery still remain unclear. In vitro infection models revealed that survival and suppressive function of Treg is improved when they are confronted with lipopolysaccharide (LPS).

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