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Critical Role of CD55 in Controlling Wound Healing. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Understanding how injury healing works is still a bit unclear, but recent studies highlighted the importance of C3a and C5a receptor signaling in various cell types' growth and repair processes.
  • Disabling CD55, a factor that restrains C3ar1/C5ar1 signaling, was found to significantly boost cell growth and healing in different injury models like burns and skin reengraftment.
  • The application of a CD55 blocking antibody improved healing rates by 40-70%, suggesting a promising new approach for enhancing wound repair.

Article Abstract

How reparative processes are coordinated following injury is incompletely understood. In recent studies, we showed that autocrine C3a and C5a receptor (C3ar1 and C5ar1) G protein-coupled receptor signaling plays an obligate role in vascular endothelial growth factor receptor 2 growth signaling in vascular endothelial cells. We documented the same interconnection for platelet-derived growth factor receptor growth signaling in smooth muscle cells, epidermal growth factor receptor growth signaling in epidermal cells, and fibroblast growth factor receptor signaling in fibroblasts, indicative of a generalized cell growth regulatory mechanism. In this study, we examined one physiological consequence of this signaling circuit. We found that disabling CD55 (also known as decay accelerating factor), which lifts restraint on autocrine C3ar1/C5ar1 signaling, concomitantly augments the growth of each cell type. The mechanism is heightened C3ar1/C5ar1 signaling resulting from the loss of CD55's restraint jointly potentiating growth factor production by each cell type. Examination of the effect of lifted CD55 restraint in four types of injury (burn, corneal denudation, ear lobe puncture, and reengraftment of autologous skin) showed that disabled CD55 function robustly accelerated healing in all cases, whereas disabled C3ar1/C5ar1 signaling universally retarded it. In wild-type mice with burns or injured corneas, applying a mouse anti-mouse CD55 blocking Ab (against CD55's active site) to wounds accelerated the healing rate by 40-70%. To our knowledge, these results provide new insights into mechanisms that underlie wound repair and open up a new tool for accelerating healing.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.4049/jimmunol.2300628DOI Listing

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