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Physiologically low oxygen concentrations determined in fetal skin regulate hypoxia‐inducible factor 1 and transforming growth factor β3
71
Citations
50
References
2002
Year
Low Oxygen ConcentrationsHuman GrowthFetal MedicineDermatologyEmbryologyOxidative StressInflammationRegenerative MedicineWound CareFetal Skin OxygenationMatrix BiologySkin DevelopmentGrowth Factor β3Cutaneous BiologyHypoxia (Medicine)Scar PreventionVascular BiologyPlacental FunctionDevelopmental BiologyPhysiologyTissue OxygenationWound HealingMedicineHypoxia-inducible Factor 1Alpha
In the first-trimester mammalian fetus, skin wounds heal with perfect reconstitution of the dermal architecture without scar formation. Understanding environmental molecular regulation in fetal wound healing may reveal scar-limiting therapeutical strategies for the prevention of postnatal scarring wound repair. Therefore, we performed studies on fetal skin oxygenation and skin and wound expression of hypoxia-inducible factor 1alpha (HIF-1alpha) in the sheep model in vivo and performed studies on the potential relevance of HIF-1alpha during wound healing in vitro. Skin oxygen partial pressure levels were hypoxic throughout normal development. In nonscarring fetal skin at gestation day (GD)60, HIF-1alpha could be detected neither in healthy nor in wounded tissue. At GD100, in wounds with minimal scar formation, HIF-1alpha was expressed in fibroblasts and was markedly up-regulated at the wound edge. In scarring fetal wounds at GD120, HIF-1alpha was predominantly expressed in inflammatory cells. Expression of transforming growth factor beta3 (TGF-beta3), a potent antiscarring cytokine, overlapped with HIF-1a expression at GD100. HIF-1alpha-deficient mouse embryonic fibroblasts showed impaired migratory capabilities and demonstrated that TGF-beta3, but not proscarring TGF-beta1, manifests hypoxia- and HIF-1alpha-dependent regulation. In conclusion, HIF-1alpha-dependent regulation of a potent antiscarring cytokine may provide new strategies for antiscarring manipulation of wound healing.
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