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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Dynamic reciprocity in the wound microenvironment

TLDR
This review considers how a number of hypotheses that attempt to explain chronic wound pathophysiology may be understood within the dynamic reciprocity framework, while considering specific examples across acute and chronic wound healing.
Abstract
Here, we define dynamic reciprocity (DR) as an ongoing, bidirectional interaction among cells and their surrounding microenvironment. In this review, we posit that DR is especially meaningful during wound healing as the DR-driven biochemical, biophysical, and cellular responses to injury play pivotal roles in regulating tissue regenerative responses. Such cell-extracellular matrix interactions not only guide and regulate cellular morphology, but also cellular differentiation, migration, proliferation, and survival during tissue development, including, e.g., embryogenesis, angiogenesis, as well as during pathologic processes including cancer, diabetes, hypertension, and chronic wound healing. Herein, we examine DR within the wound microenvironment while considering specific examples across acute and chronic wound healing. This review also considers how a number of hypotheses that attempt to explain chronic wound pathophysiology may be understood within the DR framework. The implications of applying the principles of DR to optimize wound care practice and future development of innovative wound healing therapeutics are also briefly considered.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Wound Healing: A Cellular Perspective.

TL;DR: It is shown that changes in the microenvironment including alterations in mechanical forces, oxygen levels, chemokines, extracellular matrix and growth factor synthesis directly impact cellular recruitment and activation, leading to impaired states of wound healing.
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Extracellular matrix-based materials for regenerative medicine

TL;DR: Challenges and opportunities of ECM biomaterials are investigated for the design of organotypic models to study disease progression, for the ex vivo creation of engineered tissue and for the clinical translation of functional tissue reconstruction strategies in vivo.
Journal ArticleDOI

Wound healing and the role of fibroblasts.

TL;DR: The research evidence on the role of fibroblasts, their origins and activation, and how they navigate the wound bed are explored, as well as how their activity leads to wound contraction are summarized.
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In situ forming injectable hydrogels for drug delivery and wound repair.

TL;DR: This review highlights injectable therapeutic hydrogel biomaterials in the context of drug delivery and tissue regeneration for skin wound repair and provides an avenue to minimally invasively deliver therapeutic payloads, fill complex tissue defects, and induce the regeneration of damaged portions of the body.
Journal ArticleDOI

Cutaneous wound healing: recruiting developmental pathways for regeneration

TL;DR: The varying responses to cutaneous injury across the taxa are discussed, ranging from complete regeneration to scar tissue formation, and research into the role of developmental pathways during skin repair has contributed to current wound therapies, and holds potential for the development of more effective treatments.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

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TL;DR: The primary goals of the treatment of wounds are rapid wound closure and a functional and aesthetically satisfactory scar.
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TL;DR: It is clear that the understanding of the myofibroblast — its origins, functions and molecular regulation — will have a profound influence on the future effectiveness not only of tissue engineering but also of regenerative medicine generally.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Extracellular Matrix: Not Just Pretty Fibrils

TL;DR: The extracellular matrix and ECM proteins are important in phenomena as diverse as developmental patterning, stem cell niches, cancer, and genetic diseases and these properties need to be incorporated into considerations of the functions of the ECM.
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Transforming growth factor-beta stimulates the expression of fibronectin and collagen and their incorporation into the extracellular matrix.

TL;DR: The results demonstrate a functional involvement of fibronectin in mediating cellular responses to TGFbeta, and suggest a model for TGF beta action based on the control of the extracellular matrix in target cells.
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