Delayed Wound Healing in the Elderly and a New Therapeutic Target: CD271.

IF 2.1 4区 医学 Q4 CELL & TISSUE ENGINEERING
Hongqing Zhao, Sirui Fan, Jiachen Sun
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

With the development of society, the global population is showing a trend of aging. It is well known that age is one of the factors affecting wound healing. Aging compromises the normal physiological process of wound healing, such as the change of skin structure, the decrease of growth factors, the deceleration of cell proliferation, and the weakening of migration ability, hence delaying wound healing. At present, research in adult stem cell-related technology and its derived regenerative medicine provides a novel idea for the treatment of senile wounds. Studies have confirmed that CD271 (P75 neurotropism receptor/P75NTR)-positive cells (CD271+ cells) are a kind of stem cells with a stronger ability of proliferation, differentiation, migration and secretion than CD271 negative (CD271- cells). Meanwhile, the total amount and distribution of CD271 positive cells in different ages of skin are also different, which may be related to the delayed wound healing of aging skin. Therefore, this article reviews the relationship between CD271+ cells and senile wounds and discusses a new scheme for the treatment of senile wounds.

老年人伤口愈合延迟与新的治疗靶点:CD271.
随着社会的发展,全球人口呈现老龄化趋势。众所周知,年龄是影响伤口愈合的因素之一。衰老会影响伤口愈合的正常生理过程,如皮肤结构改变、生长因子减少、细胞增殖减慢、迁移能力减弱等,从而延缓伤口愈合。目前,成人干细胞相关技术及其衍生的再生医学研究为治疗老年性伤口提供了新思路。研究证实,CD271(P75神经受体/P75NTR)阳性细胞(CD271+细胞)是一种增殖、分化、迁移和分泌能力均强于CD271阴性细胞(CD271-细胞)的干细胞。同时,CD271 阳性细胞在不同年龄皮肤中的总量和分布也不同,这可能与老化皮肤伤口愈合延迟有关。因此,本文回顾了 CD271+ 细胞与老年性伤口的关系,并探讨了治疗老年性伤口的新方案。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Current stem cell research & therapy
Current stem cell research & therapy CELL & TISSUE ENGINEERING-CELL BIOLOGY
CiteScore
4.20
自引率
3.70%
发文量
197
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: Current Stem Cell Research & Therapy publishes high quality frontier reviews, drug clinical trial studies and guest edited issues on all aspects of basic research on stem cells and their uses in clinical therapy. The journal is essential reading for all researchers and clinicians involved in stem cells research.
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