Dynamics of neutrophil infiltration during cutaneous wound healing and infection using fluorescence imaging

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Abstract

Neutrophil influx is an early inflammatory response that is essential for the clearance of bacteria and cellular debris during cutaneous wounding. A non-invasive real-time fluorescence imaging technique was developed to examine the kinetics of enhanced green fluorescence protein-polymorphonuclear leukocyte (EGFP-PMN) influx within a wound. We hypothesized that infection or systemic availability would directly regulate the dynamics of EGFP-PMN recruitment and the efficiency of wound closure. Neutrophil recruitment increased dramatically over the first 24 hours from 106 at 4 hours up to a maximum of 5 × 106 EGFP-PMNs at 18 hours. A high rate of EGFP-PMN turnover was evidenced by ∼80% decrease in EGFP signal within 6 hours. In response to wound colonization by Staphylococcus aureus or injection of GM-CSF, systemic PMNs increased twofold above saline control. This correlated with an increase in EGFP-PMN recruitment up to ∼107 within the wound. Despite this effect by these distinct inflammatory drivers, wound closure occurred at a rate similar to the saline-treated control group. In summary, a non-invasive fluorescence-based imaging approach combined with genetic labeling of neutrophils provides a dynamic inner view of inflammation and the kinetics of neutrophil infiltration into the wounded skin over extended durations. © 2008 The Society for Investigative Dermatology.

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Kim, M. H., Liu, W., Borjesson, D. L., Curry, F. R. E., Miller, L. S., Cheung, A. L., … Simon, S. I. (2008). Dynamics of neutrophil infiltration during cutaneous wound healing and infection using fluorescence imaging. Journal of Investigative Dermatology, 128(7), 1812–1820. https://doi.org/10.1038/sj.jid.5701223

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