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- Title
Putative Wound Healing Induction Functions of Exosomes Isolated from IMMUNEPOTENT CRP.
- Authors
García Coronado, Paola Leonor; Franco Molina, Moisés Armides; Zárate Triviño, Diana Ginette; Menchaca Arredondo, Jorge Luis; Zapata Benavides, Pablo; Rodriguez Padilla, Cristina
- Abstract
Chronic wounds in diabetic patients can take months or years to heal, representing a great cost for the healthcare sector and impacts on patients' lifestyles. Therefore, new effective treatment alternatives are needed to accelerate the healing process. Exosomes are nanovesicles involved in the modulation of signaling pathways that can be produced by any cell and can exert functions similar to the cell of origin. For this reason, IMMUNEPOTENT CRP, which is a bovine spleen leukocyte extract, was analyzed to identify the proteins present and is proposed as a source of exosomes. The exosomes were isolated through ultracentrifugation and shape-size, characterized by atomic force microscopy. The protein content in IMMUNEPOTENT CRP was characterized by EV-trap coupled to liquid chromatography. The in silico analyses for biological pathways, tissue specificity, and transcription factor inducement were performed in GOrilla ontology, Panther ontology, Metascape, and Reactome. It was observed that IMMUNEPOTENT CRP contains diverse peptides. The peptide-containing exosomes had an average size of 60 nm, and exomeres of 30 nm. They had biological activity capable of modulating the wound healing process, through inflammation modulation and the activation of signaling pathways such as PIP3-AKT, as well as other pathways activated by FOXE genes related to specificity in the skin tissue.
- Subjects
WOUND healing; GREEN'S functions; EXOSOMES; ATOMIC force microscopy; TRANSCRIPTION factors; CHRONIC wounds &; injuries
- Publication
International Journal of Molecular Sciences, 2023, Vol 24, Issue 10, p8971
- ISSN
1661-6596
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.3390/ijms24108971