4.7 Article

ERβ Accelerates Diabetic Wound Healing by Ameliorating Hyperglycemia-Induced Persistent Oxidative Stress

Journal

FRONTIERS IN ENDOCRINOLOGY
Volume 10, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fendo.2019.00499

Keywords

ER beta; SOD2; mitochondria; oxidative stress; wound healing

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [81772097, 81501667]
  2. Hubei Science & Technology Development Project [2016CFB473, 2016CFB589]
  3. Health and Family Planning Commission of Wuhan Municipality [WX17A03]
  4. Bureau of Public Health of Hainan Province Key Project [14A110065]

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Delayed wound healing in diabetic patients is a serious diabetic complication, resulting in major health problems as well as high mortality and disability. The detailed mechanism still needs to be fully understood. In this study, we aim to investigate potential mechanisms and explore an efficient strategy for clinical treatment of diabetic wound healing. Human umbilical endothelial cells were exposed to hyperglycemia for 4 days, then switched to normoglycemia for an additional 4 days. The cells were harvested for the analysis of reactive oxygen species (ROS) generation, gene expression and VEGF signaling pathway. Furthermore, the diabetic wound model was established in rats for the evaluation of wound healing rates under the treatment of either ER beta agonist/antagonist or SOD mimetic MnTBAP. Our results show that transient hyperglycemia exposure results in persistent ROS overgeneration after the switch to normoglycemia, along with suppressed expression of ER beta SOD2, and the VEGF signaling pathway. Either ER beta expression or activation diminishes ROS generation. In vivo experiments with diabetic rats show that ER beta activation or SOD mimetic MnTBAP diminishes ROS generation in tissues and accelerates diabetic wound healing. Transient hyperglycemia exposure induces ROS generation and suppresses ER beta expression, subsequently resulting in SOD2 suppression with additional elevated ROS generation. This forms a positive-feed forward loop for ROS generation with persistent oxidative stress. ER beta expression or activation breaks this loop and ameliorates this effect, thereby accelerating diabetic wound healing. We conclude that ER beta accelerates diabetic wound healing by ameliorating hyperglycemia-induced persistent oxidative stress. This provides a new strategy for clinical treatment of diabetic wound healing based on ER beta activation.

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