Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications, Vol.453, No.1, 153-159, 2014
Acute downregulation of miR-155 at wound sites leads to a reduced fibrosis through attenuating inflammatory response
Fibrosis, tightly associated with wound healing, is a significant symptomatic clinical problem. Inflammatory response was reported to be one of the reasons. MiR-155 is relatively related with the development and requirement of inflammatory cells, so we thought reduce the expression of miR-155 in wound sites could improve the quality of healing through reduce inflammatory response. To test this hypothesis, locally antagonizing miR-155 by directly injecting antagomir to wound edge was used to reduce the expression of miR-155. We found wounds treated with miR-155 antagomir had an obvious defect in immune cells requirements, pro-inflammatory factors IL-1 beta and TNF-alpha reduced while anti-inflammatory factor IL-10 increased. With treatment of miR-155 antagomir, the expression of a-smooth muscle actin (alpha-SMA), Col1 and Col3 at wound sites all reduced both from mRNA levels and protein expressions. Wounds injected with antagomir resulted in the structure improvement of collagen, the collagen fibers were more regularly arranged. Meanwhile the rate of healing did not change significantly. These results provide direct evidences that miR-155 play an important role in the pathogenesis of fibrosis and show that miR-155 antagomir has the potential therapy in prevention and reduction of skin fibrosis. (C) 2014 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.