Mitochondria-targeted antioxidant SkQ1 improves impaired dermal wound healing in old mice

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Abstract

The process of skin wound healing is delayed or impaired in aging animals. To investigate the possible role of mitochondrial reactive oxygen species (mtROS) in cutaneous wound healing of aged mice, we have applied the mitochondriatargeted antioxidant SkQ1. The SkQ1 treatment resulted in accelerated resolution of the inflammatory phase, formation of granulation tissue, vascularization and epithelization of the wounds. The wounds of SkQ1-treated mice contained increased amount of myofibroblasts which produce extracellular matrix proteins and growth factors mediating granulation tissue formation. This effect resembled SkQ1-induced differentiation of fibroblasts to myofibroblast, observed earlier in vitro. The Transforming Growth Factor beta (TGFβ) produced by SkQ1-treated fibroblasts was found to stimulated motility of endothelial cells in vitro, an effect which may underlie pro-angiogenic action of SkQ1 in the wounds. In vitro experiments showed that SkQ1 prevented decomposition of VE-cadherin containing contacts and following increase in permeability of endothelial cells monolayer, induced by pro-inflammatory cytokine TNF. Prevention of excessive reaction of endothelium to the pro-inflammatory cytokine(s) might account for anti-inflammatory effect of SkQ1. Our findings point to an important role of mtROS in pathogenesis of age-related chronic wounds.

Figures

  • Figure  5.  SkQ1  prevents  TNF‐induced  decomposition  of  the  endothelial  cell‐to‐cell  contacts  containing  VE‐cadherin  in  vitro. EA.hy926  cells were  incubated  for  4d with  20  nM  SkQ1, 1 mM NAC or 0.1 mM Trolox and treated with  5  ng/ml  TNF  for  24h.  (a)  Detection  of  VE‐cadherin  (green),  f‐actin  (red)  and nuclei  (blue). Bar, 15 μm.  (b)  Paracellular  permeability  assay  in  the  cell  monolayer  using  TRITC‐dextran.  (c)  Representative  immunoblotting  of  VE‐cadherin,  and  (d)  its  quantification.  "c"  ‐  untreated  cells.  Data  are  presented  as  mean  ±  SEM;  N=4;*P  <  0.05  for  SkQ1+TNF‐treated versus TNF  treated samples;  ǂP <

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CITATION STYLE

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Demyanenko, I. A., Popova, E. N., Zakharova, V. V., Ilyinskaya, O. P., Vasilieva, T. V., Romashchenko, V. P., … Chernyak, B. V. (2015). Mitochondria-targeted antioxidant SkQ1 improves impaired dermal wound healing in old mice. Aging, 7(7), 475–485. https://doi.org/10.18632/aging.100772

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