Publications by authors named "R A Dorschner"

Rapid neutrophil recruitment is critical for controlling infection, with dysfunctional neutrophil responses in diseases like diabetes associated with greater morbidity and mortality. We have shown that the leukocyte protein ECRG4 enhances early neutrophil recruitment to cutaneous wounds and hypothesized that ECRG4 regulates the early host response to infection. Using a cutaneous infection model, we found that ECRG4 KO mice had decreased early neutrophil recruitment with persistent larger lesions, increased bacterial proliferation and systemic dissemination.

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Article Synopsis
  • - Small extracellular vesicles (EVs) play a key role in wound healing by delivering biologically active molecules that enhance the response of various cell types, particularly in cases of impaired healing like in diabetic obese mice.
  • - Researchers identified that the microRNA (miR-425-5p) is down-regulated in EVs, which is linked to the regulation of adiponectin, a protein with insulin-sensitizing effects.
  • - The study involved mapping EV release from macrophages and showed that these vesicles are taken up by dermal fibroblasts, suggesting that EVs help facilitate communication and coordination between different skin cells to improve healing and reduce inflammation.
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Chronic metabolic diseases such as diabetes are characterized by delayed wound healing and a dysregulation of the inflammatory phase of wound repair. Our study focuses on changes in the payload of extracellular vesicles (EVs) communicating between immune cells and stromal cells in the wound bed, which regulate the rate of wound closure. Adoptive transfer of EVs from genetically defined mouse models are used here to demonstrate a functional and molecular basis for differences in the pro-reparative biological activity of diabetic (db/db) vs.

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The complex molecular microenvironment of the wound bed regulates the duration and degree of inflammation in the wound repair process, while its dysregulation leads to impaired healing. Understanding factors controlling this response provides therapeutic targets for inflammatory disease. Esophageal cancer-related gene 4 (ECRG4) is a candidate chemokine that is highly expressed on leukocytes.

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Healthy repair of cutaneous injury is a coordinated response of inflammatory cells, secreted factors, and biologically active extracellular vesicles (EVs). Although constitutive release of EVs into biologic fluids is a hallmark of cultured cells and tumors, their payload and biologic activity appears to be tightly regulated. We show that Tre-2/Bub2/Cdc16 (TBC1) domain family member 3 (TBC1D3) drives the release of an EV population that causes a decrease in phosphorylation of the transcription factor signal transducer and activator of transcription 3 in naive recipient cells.

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