Stromelysin-2 is a matrix metalloproteinase that degrades in vitro several protein components relevant to wound repair such as collagens III and IV, gelatin, nidogen, laminin-1, proteoglycans, and elastin. Furthermore, it can activate other matrix metalloproteinases, such as collagenase-1 (matrix metalloproteinase-1) and collagenase-2 (matrix metalloproteinase-8), as well as 92 kDa gelatinase. The aim of this study was to determine in a large variety of wounds (normally healing dermal and mucosal wounds, suction blisters, ex vivo cultures, diabetic, decubitus, rheumatic, and venous ulcers) and keratinocyte cultures, which factors contribute to stromelysin-2 expression and how it is induced in relation to other matrix metalloproteinases. Our results show that stromelysin-2 mRNA and protein are upregulated later (at 3d) than matrix metalloproteinase-1 in normally healing wounds and ex vivo explants, in which stromelysin-2 is invariably expressed by keratinocytes migrating over dermal matrix. The number of keratinocytes expressing stromelysin-2 was greatest in chronic inflamed diabetic and venous ulcers compared with rheumatoid and decubitus ulcers, six of which had no signal. In keratinocyte cultures, tumor necrosis factor-α, epidermal growth factor, and transforming growth factor-β1 induced stromelysin-2 expression as measured by quantitative reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction, whereas different matrices did not upregulate the mRNA. Immunostaining demonstrated stromal transforming growth factor-β1 in contact with the stromelysin-2-positive keratinocytes. Our results suggest that stromelysin-2 expression is important for the normal repair process and is upregulated by cytokines rather than cell-matrix interactions. Stromelysin-2 is most likely to participate in the remodeling of the newly formed basement membrane, and is not overexpressed in retarded wound healing.
CITATION STYLE
Rechardt, O., Elomaa, O., Vaalamo, M., Pääkkönen, K., Jahkola, T., Höök-Nikanne, J., … Saarialho-Kere, U. (2000). Stromelysin-2 is upregulated during normal wound repair and is induced by cytokines. Journal of Investigative Dermatology, 115(5), 778–787. https://doi.org/10.1046/j.1523-1747.2000.00135.x
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