Journal ArticleOpen Access
Mature B cells accelerate wound healing after acute and chronic diabetic skin lesions
Authors
Author Affiliations
Harvard University, In-Q-Tel, Massachusetts General Hospital, Gordon Center for Medical Imaging, ...
Published InWound Repair and Regeneration
Year2017
Citations121
Abstract
B cells improve healing of acute and diabetic murine wounds after a single topical application. B cell treatment significantly accelerated acute wound closure by 2-3 days in wild-type mice and 5-6 days in obese diabetic mice. The treatment led to full closure in 43% of chronic diabetic wounds, as compared to only 5% in saline-treated controls. Applying equivalent numbers of T cells or disrupted B cells failed to reproduce these effects, indicating that live B cells mediated pro-healing responses. Topically applied B cell treatment was associated with significantly reduced scar size, increased collagen deposition and maturation, enhanced angiogenesis, and increased nerve growth into and under the healing wound. β-III tubulin+ nerve endings in scars of wounds treated acutely with B…
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