Litcius/Paper detail

Maresin 1 repletion improves muscle regeneration after volumetric muscle loss

Jesus A. Castor‐Macias, Jacqueline Larouche, Emily C. Wallace, Bonnie D. Spence, Alec Eames, Pamela Duran, Benjamin A. Yang, Paula Fraczek, Carol Anne Davis, Susan V. Brooks, Krishna Rao Maddipati, James F. Markworth, Carlos A. Aguilar

2023eLife18 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The acute traumatic or surgical loss of skeletal muscle, known as volumetric muscle loss (VML), is a devastating type of injury that results in exacerbated and persistent inflammation followed by fibrosis. The mechanisms that mediate the magnitude and duration of the inflammatory response and ensuing fibrosis after VML remain understudied, and as such, the development of regenerative therapies has been limited. To address this need, we profiled how lipid mediators, which are potent regulators of the immune response after injury, varied with VML injuries that heal or result in fibrosis. We observed that non-healing VML injuries displayed increased pro-inflammatory eicosanoids and a lack of pro-resolving lipid mediators. Treatment of VML with a pro-resolving lipid mediator synthesized from docosahexaenoic acid, called Maresin 1, ameliorated fibrosis through reduction of neutrophils and macrophages and enhanced recovery of muscle strength. These results expand our knowledge of the dysregulated immune response that develops after VML and identify a novel immuno-regenerative therapeutic modality in Maresin 1.

Topics & Concepts

FibrosisRegeneration (biology)InflammationSkeletal muscleImmune systemMuscle tissueRegenerative medicineDocosahexaenoic acidChemistryLipid signalingMedicineInternal medicineImmunologyCell biologyPolyunsaturated fatty acidCellBiochemistryBiologyFatty acidExercise and Physiological ResponsesAdipose Tissue and MetabolismMuscle Physiology and Disorders