Login / Signup

HypoxamiR-210 accelerates wound healing in diabetic mice by improving cellular metabolism.

Sampath NarayananSofie Eliasson AngelstigCheng XuJacob GrünlerAllan ZhaoWan ZhuNing Xu LandénMona StåhleJingping ZhangMircea IvanRaluca Georgiana MaltesenIleana Ruxandra BotusanNeda Rajamand EkbergXiaowei ZhengSergiu-Bogdan Catrina
Published in: Communications biology (2020)
Wound healing is a high energy demanding process that needs a good coordination of the mitochondria with glycolysis in the characteristic highly hypoxic environment. In diabetes, hyperglycemia impairs the adaptive responses to hypoxia with profound negative effects on different cellular compartments of wound healing. miR-210 is a hypoxia-induced microRNA that regulates cellular metabolism and processes important for wound healing. Here, we show that hyperglycemia blunted the hypoxia-dependent induction of miR-210 both in vitro and in human and mouse diabetic wounds. The impaired regulation of miR-210 in diabetic wounds is pathogenic, since local miR-210 administration accelerated wound healing specifically in diabetic but not in non-diabetic mice. miR-210 reconstitution restores the metabolic balance in diabetic wounds by reducing oxygen consumption rate and ROS production and by activating glycolysis with positive consequences on cellular migration. In conclusion, miR-210 accelerates wound healing specifically in diabetes through improvement of the cellular metabolism.
Keyphrases
  • wound healing
  • cell proliferation
  • long non coding rna
  • long noncoding rna
  • type diabetes
  • endothelial cells
  • cardiovascular disease
  • signaling pathway
  • cell death
  • dna damage
  • autism spectrum disorder
  • metabolic syndrome