Observation of macrophage autophagy in the healing of diabetic ulcers via a lysosome-targeting polarity-specific two-photon probe.
Lina WangTaotao QiangLongfang RenFei ChengWei HuRen-Yu QuPublished in: RSC advances (2022)
As a disease with high incidence, mutilation, and fatality rates, diabetic ulcers (DUs) have become a difficult and complicated disease of widely concern in recent years due to the unclear healing mechanism. The main reason for the delayed healing in DU patients is the unduly long chronic inflammation window, and the polarization state of macrophages plays a key role in this process. Since autophagy is believed to be closely related to the polarization trend of macrophages, recent studies have shown that autophagy is closely related to the healing of DU. To this end, a lysosome-targeting polarity-sensitive probe, XZTU-VIS, was developed to monitor the changes in lysosomal polarity, thereby assessing the autophagy of macrophages in mice suffering from DU. The experimental results showed that under two-photon fluorescence microscopy, the green channel fluorescence signal of XZTU-VIS decreased significantly during autophagy. In the meantime, DU models established using BV-2 cells and mice showed a process that could cause inflammation and the release of ROS, thereby inducing autophagy.
Keyphrases
- cell death
- oxidative stress
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- living cells
- signaling pathway
- induced apoptosis
- cell cycle arrest
- single molecule
- type diabetes
- end stage renal disease
- fluorescent probe
- wound healing
- dna damage
- chronic kidney disease
- cancer therapy
- high resolution
- newly diagnosed
- adipose tissue
- drug delivery
- metabolic syndrome
- peritoneal dialysis
- cell proliferation
- mass spectrometry
- insulin resistance
- high fat diet induced
- skeletal muscle
- inflammatory response
- energy transfer
- high speed