Abstract

Wound healing is one of the most complex processes in the human body. It involves the spatial and temporal synchronization of a variety of cell types with distinct roles in the phases of hemostasis, inflammation, growth, re-epithelialization, and remodeling. With the evolution of single cell technologies, it has been possible to uncover phenotypic and functional heterogeneity within several of these cell types. There have also been discoveries of rare, stem cell subsets within the skin, which are unipotent in the uninjured state, but become multipotent following skin injury. Unraveling the roles of each of these cell types and their interactions with each other is important in understanding the mechanisms of normal wound closure. Changes in the microenvironment including alterations in mechanical forces, oxygen levels, chemokines, extracellular matrix and growth factor synthesis directly impact cellular recruitment and activation, leading to impaired states of wound healing. Single cell technologies can be used to decipher these cellular alterations in diseased states such as in chronic wounds and hypertrophic scarring so that effective therapeutic solutions for healing wounds can be developed.

Keywords

Wound healingExtracellular matrixCell typeBiologyCell biologyCell migrationInflammationCellImmunologyGenetics

MeSH Terms

AnimalsBlood PlateletsExtracellular MatrixHemostasisHumansNeovascularizationPhysiologicSkinWound Healing

Affiliated Institutions

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Publication Info

Year
2018
Type
review
Volume
99
Issue
1
Pages
665-706
Citations
2578
Access
Closed

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2578
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70
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2333
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Cite This

Mélanie Rodrigues, Nina Kosaric, Clark A. Bonham et al. (2018). Wound Healing: A Cellular Perspective. Physiological Reviews , 99 (1) , 665-706. https://doi.org/10.1152/physrev.00067.2017

Identifiers

DOI
10.1152/physrev.00067.2017
PMID
30475656
PMCID
PMC6442927

Data Quality

Data completeness: 90%