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Role of Enzymic Antioxidants in Mediating Oxidative Stress and Contrasting Wound Healing Capabilities in Oral Mucosal/Skin Fibroblasts and Tissues. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Oral mucosal wounds heal faster and with less scarring than skin wounds, mainly due to the superior healing properties of oral mucosal fibroblasts (OMFs).
  • The study compared oxidative stress markers and antioxidant profiles between oral mucosa and skin tissues, finding that OMFs have a stronger resistance to oxidative damage and are more effective in healing.
  • Although higher levels of certain enzymes (like SOD3) were found in oral tissues, the exact contributions of enzymatic antioxidants in wound healing may be limited, suggesting other antioxidants could also play a vital role in protecting OMFs from oxidative stress.

Article Abstract

Unlike skin, oral mucosal wounds are characterized by rapid healing and minimal scarring, attributable to the "enhanced" healing properties of oral mucosal fibroblasts (OMFs). As oxidative stress is increasingly implicated in regulating wound healing outcomes, this study compared oxidative stress biomarker and enzymic antioxidant profiles between patient-matched oral mucosal/skin tissues and OMFs/skin fibroblasts (SFs) to determine whether superior oral mucosal antioxidant capabilities and reduced oxidative stress contributed to these preferential healing properties. Oral mucosa and skin exhibited similar patterns of oxidative protein damage and lipid peroxidation, localized within the lamina propria/dermis and oral/skin epithelia, respectively. SOD1, SOD2, SOD3 and catalase were primarily localized within epithelial tissues overall. However, SOD3 was also widespread within the lamina propria localized to OMFs, vasculature and the extracellular matrix. OMFs were further identified as being more resistant to reactive oxygen species (ROS) generation and oxidative DNA/protein damage than SFs. Despite histological evaluation suggesting that oral mucosa possessed higher SOD3 expression, this was not fully substantiated for all OMFs examined due to inter-patient donor variability. Such findings suggest that enzymic antioxidants have limited roles in mediating privileged wound healing responses in OMFs, implying that other non-enzymic antioxidants could be involved in protecting OMFs from oxidative stress overall.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10375950PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/antiox12071374DOI Listing

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