4.7 Article

Menstrual fluid factors facilitate tissue repair: identification and functional action in endometrial and skin repair

Journal

FASEB JOURNAL
Volume 33, Issue 1, Pages 584-605

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1096/fj.201800086R

Keywords

migration; menstruation; proteomics

Funding

  1. National Health Medical Research Council of Australia (NHHRC) [1047756]
  2. Contributing to Australian Scholarship and Science (CASS) grant
  3. Tissue Repair and Regeneration Program
  4. Faculty of Health at Queensland University of Technology
  5. National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC) Senior Principal Research Fellowship [1002028]
  6. Victorian Government Infrastructure Support Program of the Hudson Institute from the Operational Infrastructure Research Support (OIRS) fund

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Repair after damage is essential for tissue homeostasis. Postmenstrual endometrial repair is a cyclical manifestation of rapid, scar-free, tissue repair taking approximate to 3-5 d. Skin repair after wounding is slower (approximate to 2 wk). In the case of chronic wounds, it takes months to years to restore integrity. Herein, the unique rapid-repair endometrial environment is translated to the slower repair skin environment. Menstrual fluid (MF), the milieu of postmenstrual endometrial repair, facilitates healing of endometrial and keratinocyte wounds in vitro, promoting cellular adhesion and migration, stimulates keratinocyte migration in an ex vivo human skin reconstruct model, and promotes re-epithelialization in an in vivo porcine wound model. Proteomic analysis of MF identified a large number of proteins: migration inhibitory factor, neutrophil gelatinase-associated lipocalin, follistatin like-1, chemokine ligand-20, and secretory leukocyte protease inhibitor were selected for further investigation. Functionally, they promote repair of endometrial and keratinocyte wounds by promoting migration. Translation of these and other MF factors into a migration-inducing treatment paradigm could provide novel treatments for tissue repair.Evans, J., Infusini, G., McGovern, J., Cuttle, L., Webb, A., Nebl, T., Milla, L., Kimble, R., Kempf, M., Andrews, C. J., Leavesley, D., Salamonsen, L. A. Menstrual fluid factors facilitate tissue repair: identification and functional action in endometrial and skin repair.

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