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Skin wounds in rats treated topically with insulin healed
faster"surface cells in the epidermis covered the wound more quickly
and cells in the dermis, the deeper part of the skin, were faster in
rebuilding blood vessels.
In follow-up studies of human skin
cells in culture, Manuela Martins-Green and colleagues explored the
molecular impact of topical insulin on keratinocytes, the cells that
regenerate the epidermis after wounding, and on microvascular
endothelial cells, the cells that restore blood flow.
Using
various cell and molecular techniques, the researchers discovered that
insulin stimulates human keratinocytes in culture to proliferate and
migrate. In cultured human microvascular endothelial cells, the insulin
stimulates only migration into the wound tissue. The insulin works by
switching on cellular signaling proteins called kinases (specifically
Src, PI3K, and Akt) and a protein (SREBP) that binds elements in DNA
that regulate the production of cholesterol and its relatives.
Chronic
or nonhealing wounds take an immense toll on American health and on
health care systems. It particularly affects millions of patients with
impaired mobility, as well as those with diabetes. Because diabetes is
a disease caused by impaired production or utilization of insulin, this
work may help explain the connection between diabetes and poor healing.
Says Martins-Green, "This work is important because when we know
which cells respond to insulin and which molecules are involved, we may
be able to develop ways in which we can make insulin work even better
or find ways in which more affordable molecules that mimic these
functions of insulin can be developed to treat people who suffer from
poor healing."
Note: This story has been adapted from a news release issued by American Society for Cell Biology.
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