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Advances of exosomes in diabetic wound healing

Weixue Jin, Yi Li, Meirong Yu, Danyang Ren, Chunmao Han, Songxue Guo

2024Burns & Trauma30 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Poor wound healing is a refractory process that places an enormous medical and financial burden on diabetic patients. Exosomes have recently been recognized as crucial players in the healing of diabetic lesions. They have excellent stability, homing effects, biocompatibility, and reduced immunogenicity as novel cell-free therapies. In addition to transporting cargos to target cells to enhance intercellular communication, exosomes are beneficial in nearly every phase of diabetic wound healing. They participate in modulating the inflammatory response, accelerating proliferation and reepithelization, increasing angiogenesis, and regulating extracellular matrix remodeling. Accumulating evidence indicates that hydrogels or dressings in conjunction with exosomes can prolong the duration of exosome residency in diabetic wounds. This review provides an overview of the mechanisms, delivery, clinical application, engineering, and existing challenges of the use of exosomes in diabetic wound repair. We also propose future directions for biomaterials incorporating exosomes: 2D or 3D scaffolds, biomaterials loaded with wound healing-promoting gases, intelligent biomaterials, and the prospect of systematic application of exosomes. These findings may might shed light on future treatments and enlighten some studies to improve quality of life among diabetes patients.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineMicrovesiclesWound healingIntensive care medicineImmunologymicroRNAChemistryBiochemistryGeneExtracellular vesicles in diseaseWound Healing and TreatmentsElectrospun Nanofibers in Biomedical Applications
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