Litcius/Paper detail

Exosomes derived from platelet-rich plasma promote diabetic wound healing via the JAK2/STAT3 pathway

Wenhai Cao, Xiaotong Meng, Fangming Cao, Jinpeng Wang, Maowei Yang

2023iScience37 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Diabetic non-healing wounds are bringing a heavy burden on patients and society. Platelet-rich plasma (PRP) has been widely applied in tissue regenerating for containing various growth factors. Recently, PRP-derived exosomes (PRP-Exos) have been proved to be more effective than PRP in tissue regeneration. However, few studies have investigated the therapeutic potential of PRP-Exos in diabetic wound healing to date. Therefore, we extracted and identified exosomes derived from PRP and tested its promoting effect on diabetic wound healing in vivo and in vitro . We found that high glucose (HG) inhibited cell proliferation and migration and induced apoptosis through ROS-dependent activation of the JNK and p38 MAPK signaling pathways. PRP-Exos can stimulate fibroblast functions and accelerate diabetic wound healing. The benefits of PRP-Exos may be attributed to its capability to prevent HG-induced ROS-dependent apoptosis via the PDGF-BB/JAK2/STAT3/Bcl-2 signaling pathway. This illustrates the therapeutic potential of PRP-Exos in diabetic wounds.

Topics & Concepts

Platelet-rich plasmaWound healingMicrovesiclesApoptosisCell biologyRegeneration (biology)MAPK/ERK pathwayCancer researchChemistrySignal transductionExosomeFibroblastReactive oxygen speciesPlatelet-derived growth factor receptorMedicineImmunologyIn vitromicroRNABiologyPlateletGrowth factorReceptorBiochemistryGeneWound Healing and TreatmentsPeriodontal Regeneration and TreatmentsExtracellular vesicles in disease