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Ephrin-A2 affects wound healing and scarring in a murine model of excisional injury
Journal article   Peer reviewed

Ephrin-A2 affects wound healing and scarring in a murine model of excisional injury

Dulharie Wijeratne, Jennifer Rodger, Andrew Stevenson, Hilary Wallace, Cecilia M. Prele, Fiona M. Wood and Mark W. Fear
BURNS, Vol.45(3), pp.682-690
2019
PMID: 30482614

Abstract

Critical Care Medicine Dermatology General & Internal Medicine Life Sciences & Biomedicine Science & Technology Surgery
Ephrin ligand/Eph receptor signaling is important in both tissue development and homeostasis. There is increasing evidence that Ephrin/Eph signaling is important in the skin, involved in hair follicle cycling, epidermal differentiation, cutaneous innervation and skin cancer. However, there is currently limited information on the role of Ephrin/Eph signaling in cutaneous wound healing. Here we report the effects of the Ephrin-A2 and A5 ligands on wound healing. Using Ephrin-A2−/−, Ephrin-A5−/− and Ephrin-A2A5−/− transgenic mice, in vitro wound healing assays were conducted using isolated keratinocytes and fibroblasts. Ephrin-A2−/−, Ephrin-A2A5−/− and wild type mice with excisional wounds were used to analyze the impact of these ligands on wound closure, scar outcome, collagen orientation and re-innervation in vivo. The absence of the Ephrin-A2 and A5 ligands did not have any effect on dermal fibroblast proliferation or on fibroblast or keratinocyte migration. The loss of Ephrin-A2 and A5 ligands did not impact on the rate of wound closure or re-innervation after injury. However, changes in the gross morphology of the healed scar and in collagen histology of the scar dermis were observed in transgenic mice. Therefore Ephrin-A2 and A5 ligands may play an important role in final scar appearance associated with collagen deposition and structure.

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Collaboration types
Domestic collaboration
Citation topics
1 Clinical & Life Sciences
1.5 Neuroscience
1.5.826 Neuronal Development
Web Of Science research areas
Critical Care Medicine
Dermatology
Surgery
ESI research areas
Clinical Medicine
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