AI Article Synopsis

  • Birch bark has a historical use as a medicinal remedy for wound healing, with recent clinical studies validating its effectiveness, particularly through a preparation called TE (triterpene extract).
  • The study demonstrates that TE and betulin promote wound healing by enhancing keratinocyte migration and increasing pro-inflammatory substances, which are crucial during the wound healing process.
  • The underlying mechanisms involve the stabilization of mRNA for certain inflammatory mediators and the activation of signaling pathways that influence cell movement, positioning birch bark as a significant natural treatment for accelerating wound recovery.

Article Abstract

Background: Birch bark has a long lasting history as a traditional medicinal remedy to accelerate wound healing. Recently, the efficacy of birch bark preparations has also been proven clinically. As active principle pentacyclic triterpenes are generally accepted. Here, we report a comprehensive study on the underlying molecular mechanisms of the wound healing properties of a well-defined birch bark preparation named as TE (triterpene extract) as well as the isolated single triterpenes in human primary keratinocytes and porcine ex-vivo wound healing models.

Methodology/principal Findings: We show positive wound healing effects of TE and betulin in scratch assay experiments with primary human keratinocytes and in a porcine ex-vivo wound healing model (WHM). Mechanistical studies elucidate that TE and betulin transiently upregulate pro-inflammatory cytokines, chemokines and cyclooxygenase-2 on gene and protein level. For COX-2 and IL-6 this increase of mRNA is due to an mRNA stabilizing effect of TE and betulin, a process in which p38 MAPK and HuR are involved. TE promotes keratinocyte migration, putatively by increasing the formation of actin filopodia, lamellipodia and stress fibers. Detailed analyses show that the TE components betulin, lupeol and erythrodiol exert this effect even in nanomolar concentrations. Targeting the actin cytoskeleton is dependent on the activation of Rho GTPases.

Conclusion/significance: Our results provide insights to understand the molecular mechanism of the clinically proven wound healing effect of birch bark. TE and betulin address the inflammatory phase of wound healing by transient up-regulation of several pro-inflammatory mediators. Further, they enhance migration of keratinocytes, which is essential in the second phase of wound healing. Our results, together with the clinically proven efficacy, identify birch bark as the first medical plant with a high potential to improve wound healing, a field which urgently needs effective remedies.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3899119PMC
http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0086147PLOS

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