[PDF][PDF] Targeting connexin43 expression accelerates the rate of wound repair

C Qiu, P Coutinho, S Frank, S Franke, L Law, P Martin… - Current Biology, 2003 - cell.com
C Qiu, P Coutinho, S Frank, S Franke, L Law, P Martin, CR Green, DL Becker
Current Biology, 2003cell.com
The repair of tissue damage is a key survival process in all organisms and involves the
coordinated activation of several cell types. Cell-cell communication is clearly fundamental
to this process, and a great deal is known about extracellular communication within the
wound site via cytokines [1, 2]. Here we show that direct cell-cell communication through
connexin 43 (Cx43) gap junction channels [3, 4] also plays a major role in the wound
healing process. In two different wound healing models, incisional and excisional skin …
Abstract
The repair of tissue damage is a key survival process in all organisms and involves the coordinated activation of several cell types. Cell-cell communication is clearly fundamental to this process, and a great deal is known about extracellular communication within the wound site via cytokines [1, 2]. Here we show that direct cell-cell communication through connexin 43 (Cx43) gap junction channels [3, 4] also plays a major role in the wound healing process. In two different wound healing models, incisional and excisional skin lesions, we show that a single topical application of Cx43 antisense gel brings about a transient downregulation of Cx43 protein levels, and this results in a dramatic increase in the rate of wound closure. Cx43 knockdown reduces inflammation, seen both macroscopically, as a reduction in swelling, redness, and wound gape, and microscopically, as a significant decrease in neutrophil numbers in the tissue around the wound. One long-term consequence of the improved rate of healing is a significant reduction in the extent of granulation tissue deposition and the subsequent formation of a smaller, less distorted, scar. This approach is likely to have widespread therapeutic applications in other injured tissues and opens up new avenues of research into improving the wound healing process.
cell.com