Abstract

SummaryDisorders of cutaneous repair can cause disability or death given that skin functions as a protective barrier against the external environment. The inflammatory response triggered by tissue damage is thought to play both positive (e.g., pathogen-killing) and negative (e.g., scarring) roles in repair [1–3]. Inflammatory resolution mediators such as chemerin15 (C15) control the magnitude and duration of the inflammatory response; however, their role in wound repair and scarring is unknown [4–8]. Here, we show that the C15 precursor, chemerin, and its receptor, ChemR23, are both upregulated after skin damage and that the receptor is expressed by macrophages, neutrophils, and keratinocytes. Dynamic live-imaging studies of murine cutaneous wounds demonstrate that C15 delivery dampens the immediate intravascular inflammatory events, including platelet adhesion to neutrophils, an important event in driving leukocyte recruitment. C15 administration indirectly accelerates wound closure while altering fibroblast-mediated collagen deposition and alignment to reduce scarring. Macrophage recruitment is restricted to the immediate wound site rather than spilling extensively into the adjacent tissue as in control wounds, and macrophage phenotype in C15-treated wounds is skewed toward a less inflammatory phenotype with reduced iNOS, increased Arginase-1, and lower wound tumor necrosis factor α (TNF-α) expression. Modulation of inflammatory resolution pathways in acute and chronic wounds may therefore provide a novel therapeutic avenue to improve repair and reduce scarring.

Highlights

  • C15 Improves the Rate and Quality of Wound Repair To investigate the potential effect of the chemerin peptide C15 on wound repair, we administered peptide (100 pg/wound) or vehicle control in Pluronic gel immediately after wounding

  • C15 Exerts Direct and Indirect Effects on Keratinocyte and Fibroblast Physiology While our studies demonstrate that C15 can promote wound re-epithelialization and closure, it is unclear whether this is mediated entirely through C15’s effects on inflammation or whether there might be some direct modulation of keratinocyte and fibroblast behavior by the peptide

  • We found that C15 modestly promoted keratinocyte migration into an in vitro ‘‘scratch wound’’ with optimal doses of 10–100 pM. (Figure 1J)

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Summary

Objectives

The aim of this study was to determine what role C15 might play in regulating the wound inflammatory response and how this might influence subsequent skin repair

Results
Discussion
Conclusion
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