伤口愈合
炎症
医学
巨噬细胞
巨噬细胞极化
组蛋白
免疫学
糖尿病
癌症研究
生物
体外
内分泌学
基因
生物化学
作者
Jing Wang,Jiawei Feng,Yiming Ni,Li Wang,Qian Zhang,Yemin Cao,Mingmei Zhou,Cheng Zhao
标识
DOI:10.3389/fimmu.2024.1450440
摘要
Impaired wound healing is one of the main clinical complications of type 2 diabetes (T2D) and a major cause of lower limb amputation. Diabetic wounds exhibit a sustained inflammatory state, and reducing inflammation is crucial to diabetic wounds management. Macrophages are key regulators in wound healing, and their dysfunction would cause exacerbated inflammation and poor healing in diabetic wounds. Gene regulation caused by histone modifications can affect macrophage phenotype and function during diabetic wound healing. Recent studies have revealed that targeting histone-modifying enzymes in a local, macrophage-specific manner can reduce inflammatory responses and improve diabetic wound healing. This article will review the significance of macrophage phenotype and function in wound healing, as well as illustrate how histone modifications affect macrophage polarization in diabetic wounds. Targeting macrophage phenotype with histone-modifying enzymes may provide novel therapeutic strategies for the treatment of diabetic wound healing.
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