Investigation of the In Vivo, In Vitro, and In Silico Wound Healing Potential of Pinctada martensii Purified Peptides.
Ting ZhangFaming YangXiaoming QinXianmei YangChaohua ZhangZhaoyi WanHaisheng LinPublished in: Marine drugs (2022)
Previous studies found that both oral and topical administration of enzymatic digestion products < 3 K Da ultrafiltration fractions of Pinctada martensii mantle (PMPs) had pro-healing effects. Thus, we further purified them by Sephadex-G25 and screened them by cellular assays to obtain Pinctada martensii purified peptides (PMPPs). In this study, we explored the mechanism of PMPPs on wound healing by in vivo, in vitro, and in silico experiments. LC-MS/MS results showed that PMPPs consisted of 33 peptides with molecular weights ranging from 758.43 to 2014.04 Da, and the characteristic peptide was Leu-Asp. The results of cellular assays showed that PMPPs promoted the proliferation of human skin fibroblasts (HSF) (135%) and human immortalized keratinocyte (HaCaT) cells (125%) very significantly at 12.5 μg/mL. The in vivo results showed that PMPPs could achieve scarless healing by inhibiting the inflammatory response, accelerating the epithelialization process, and regulating collagen I/III ratio. The optimal peptide sequence FAFQAEIAQLMS of PMPPs was screened for key protein receptors in wound healing (EGFR1, FGFR1, and MMP-1) with the help of molecular docking technique, which also showed to be the key pro-healing active peptide sequence. Therefore, it may provide a therapeutic strategy with great potential for wound healing.
Keyphrases
- wound healing
- molecular docking
- amino acid
- inflammatory response
- molecular dynamics simulations
- signaling pathway
- small cell lung cancer
- induced apoptosis
- endothelial cells
- high throughput
- human health
- hydrogen peroxide
- anti inflammatory
- cell cycle arrest
- heat shock
- tyrosine kinase
- climate change
- lipopolysaccharide induced
- risk assessment
- immune response
- oxidative stress
- extracellular matrix
- cell death
- toll like receptor
- binding protein
- single molecule
- anaerobic digestion
- nitric oxide
- protein protein
- cell migration
- lps induced
- case control