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Skin care: new research into scar-free
healing
New research from the University of Bristol shows that by
suppressing one of the genes that normally
switches on in wound cells, wounds can heal
faster and reduce scarring. This has major
implications not just for wound victims but
also for people who suffer organ tissue
damage through illness or abdominal surgery.
When skin is damaged a blood clot forms and cells underneath the
wound start to repair the damage, leading to
scarring.
Scarring is a natural part of tissue repair and is most obvious
where skin has healed after a cut or burn.
It ranges from trivial (a grazed knee) to
chronic (diabetic leg ulcers) and is not
limited to the skin.
All tissues scar as they repair; for example, alcohol-induced liver
damage leads to fibrosis and liver failure,
and after most abdominal surgeries scars can
often lead to major complications.
Tissue damage triggers an inflammatory response by white cells to
protect skin from infection by killing
microbes. The same white cells guide the
production of layers of collagen.
These layers of collagen help the wound heal but they stand out
from the surrounding skin and result in
scarring. Research byProfessor
Paul Martinand colleagues at the
University of Bristol shows that osteopontin
(OPN) is one of the genes that triggers
scarring and that applying a gel, which
suppresses OPN to the wound, can accelerate
healing and reducesscarring.
It does this in part by increasing the regeneration of blood
vessels around the wound and speeding up
tissue reconstruction.
The findings will be published by theJournal of Experimental Medicineon
26 January in a paper entitled ‘Molecular
mechanisms linking wound inflammation and
fibrosis: knockdown of osteopontin leads to
rapid repair and reduced scarring’. Thepaper
is availableonlinenow.
Speaking of the discovery, Professor Martin said: ‘White blood
cells (macrophages), and the chemical
signals (PDGF) delivered to the wound cells,
and osteopontin itself are now all clear
targets for developing medicines to improve
healing of skin wounds and other organs
where fibrotic tissue repair can be
debilitating. We hope that it won’t be too
long before such therapies are available in
the clinic. Indeed, the technique for
suppressing OPN to reduce scarring is
currently being licensed and patented by a
Biotech company specializing in
wound-healing therapies.’
Earlier research by Professor Martin’s lab
and others has shown that embryos of many
species, including humans, heal wounds
without leaving a scar. Now it looks like
the same may be true for adults.