尽管慢性缺血诱导血管生长,但成纤维细胞生长因子-2(FGF2)缺陷小鼠的肢体功能恢复受损。

IF 1.8 4区 生物学 Q4 CELL BIOLOGY Growth factors Pub Date : 2020-02-01 Epub Date: 2020-06-04 DOI:10.1080/08977194.2020.1767612
Adeola Adeyemo, Christopher Johnson, Andrew Stiene, Kathleen LaSance, Zhihua Qi, Lisa Lemen, Jo El J Schultz
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引用次数: 2

摘要

FGF2是血管生长的有力刺激因子;然而,即使FGF2(FGF2-/-)缺乏,发育中的血管生长或缺血诱导的血运重建仍然会发生。FGF2在缺血性损伤中的功能(如果有的话)还有待阐明。野生型(WT)或Fgf2-/-小鼠后肢缺血长达42天。在不同时间点评估假手术和缺血性肢体的肢体功能、血管生长、炎症和血管生成相关蛋白以及炎症细胞浸润。Fgf2-/-小鼠缺血性肢体功能的恢复延迟。然而,WT和Fgf2-/-后肢对缺血的血管生长反应相似。Fgf2-/-缺血肌肉中的几种血管生成和炎症相关蛋白(MCP-1、CXCL16、MMPs和PAI-1)增加。Fgf2-/-缺血肌肉中的中性粒细胞或单核细胞募集/浸润增加。总之,我们的研究表明,FGF2的缺失会在骨骼肌中诱导促炎微环境,从而加剧缺血性损伤并延迟肢体功能的使用。
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Limb functional recovery is impaired in fibroblast growth factor-2 (FGF2) deficient mice despite chronic ischaemia-induced vascular growth.

FGF2 is a potent stimulator of vascular growth; however, even with a deficiency of FGF2 (Fgf2-/-), developmental vessel growth or ischaemia-induced revascularization still transpires. It remains to be elucidated as to what function, if any, FGF2 has during ischaemic injury. Wildtype (WT) or Fgf2-/- mice were subjected to hindlimb ischaemia for up to 42 days. Limb function, vascular growth, inflammatory- and angiogenesis-related proteins, and inflammatory cell infiltration were assessed in sham and ischaemic limbs at various timepoints. Recovery of ischaemic limb function was delayed in Fgf2-/- mice. Yet, vascular growth response to ischaemia was similar between WT and Fgf2-/- hindlimbs. Several angiogenesis- and inflammatory-related proteins (MCP-1, CXCL16, MMPs and PAI-1) were increased in Fgf2-/- ischaemic muscle. Neutrophil or monocyte recruitment/infiltration was elevated in Fgf2-/- ischaemic muscle. In summary, our study indicates that loss of FGF2 induces a pro-inflammatory microenvironment in skeletal muscle which exacerbates ischaemic injury and delays functional limb use.

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来源期刊
Growth factors
Growth factors 生物-内分泌学与代谢
CiteScore
2.60
自引率
0.00%
发文量
20
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: Growth Factors is an international and interdisciplinary vehicle publishing new knowledge and findings on the regulators of cell proliferation, differentiation and survival. The Journal will publish research papers, short communications and reviews on current developments in cell biology, biochemistry, physiology or pharmacology of growth factors, cytokines or hormones which improve our understanding of biology or medicine. Among the various fields of study topics of particular interest include: •Stem cell biology •Growth factor physiology •Structure-activity relationships •Drug development studies •Clinical applications
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