Health
Mysteries of wound healing unlocked
New York, March 14
A multi-disciplinary
research team has discovered how cells know to rush to a wound and heal
it - opening the door to new treatments for diabetes, heart disease and
cancer.
"In recent years, researchers have gained a better
understanding of the molecular machinery of cell migration, but not what
directs it to happen in the first place," said lead researcher Kin Wong
from the University of Arizona (UA).
The answer, it turned out,
involves delicate interactions between biomechanical stress, or force,
which living cells exert on one another, and biochemical signalling.
The
researchers discovered that when mechanical force disappears - for
example at a wound site where cells have been destroyed, leaving empty,
cell-free space - a protein molecule, known as DII4, coordinates nearby
cells to migrate to a wound site and collectively cover it with new
tissue.
This elaborate auto-regulatory system remains activated until new tissue has covered a wound.
"The
results significantly increase our understanding of how tissue
regeneration is regulated and advance our ability to guide these
processes," Wong said.
The results represent a major advancement
for regenerative medicine, in which biomedical engineers manipulate
cells' form and function to create new tissues, and even organs, to
repair, restore or replace those damaged by injury or disease.
The same migration processes for wound healing and tissue development also apply to cancer spreading, the researchers noted.
"Knowing
the genetic makeup of leader cells and understanding their formation
and behaviour gives us the ability to alter cell migration," Wong added.
With
this new knowledge, researchers can re-create, at the cellular and
molecular levels, the chain of events that brings about the formation of
human tissue.
Bioengineers now have the information they need to
direct normal cells to heal damaged tissue, or prevent cancer cells
from invading healthy tissue.
The findings were published in Nature Communications