4.7 Article

Hypoxia-induced changes in Ca2+ mobilization and protein phosphorylation implicated in impaired wound healing

Journal

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PHYSIOLOGY-CELL PHYSIOLOGY
Volume 306, Issue 10, Pages C972-C985

Publisher

AMER PHYSIOLOGICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1152/ajpcell.00110.2013

Keywords

hypoxia; wound healing; imaging; cell communication

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [R01 EY-06000, R01 EY-06000S, S10 RR-017967]
  2. New England Corneal Transplant Fund
  3. National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute [R01 HL-088672]
  4. BrightFocus Foundation [M2012014]
  5. Ophthalmology Departmental Grant from the Massachusetts Lions Eye Research Fund

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The process of wound healing must be tightly regulated to achieve successful restoration of injured tissue. Previously, we demonstrated that when corneal epithelium is injured, nucleotides and neuronal factors are released to the extracellular milieu, generating a Ca2+ wave from the origin of the wound to neighboring cells. In the present study we sought to determine how the communication between epithelial cells in the presence or absence of neuronal wound media is affected by hypoxia. A signal-sorting algorithm was developed to determine the dynamics of Ca2+ signaling between neuronal and epithelial cells. The cross talk between activated corneal epithelial cells in response to neuronal wound media demonstrated that injury-induced Ca2+ dynamic patterns were altered in response to decreased O-2 levels. These alterations were associated with an overall decrease in ATP and changes in purinergic receptor-mediated Ca2+ mobilization and localization of N-methyl-D-aspartate receptors. In addition, we used the cornea in an organ culture wound model to examine how hypoxia impedes reepithelialization after injury. There was a change in the recruitment of paxillin to the cell membrane and deposition of fibronectin along the basal lamina, both factors in cell migration. Our results provide evidence that complex Ca2(+)-mediated signaling occurs between sensory neurons and epithelial cells after injury and is critical to wound healing. Information revealed by these studies will contribute to an enhanced understanding of wound repair under compromised conditions and provide insight into ways to effectively stimulate proper epithelial repair.

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