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. 2004 Dec 20;4(14):1873-80.
doi: 10.1016/j.intimp.2004.08.009.

Possible involvement of mast cells in collagen remodeling in the late phase of cutaneous wound healing in mice

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Possible involvement of mast cells in collagen remodeling in the late phase of cutaneous wound healing in mice

Yoshinori Iba et al. Int Immunopharmacol. .

Abstract

We examined possible roles of mast cells in cutaneous wound healing using mast cell deficient (W/Wv) mice and their normal littermates (+/+). A round full-thickness wound was made on the back skin of these mice. The wounds closed completely within 20 days, and there was no difference in wound contraction between +/+ and W/Wv mice during the wound healing. While either chymase or tryptase activities were hardly detectable in W/Wv mice, chymase activities decreased at the impaired sites and recovered to the control level within 20 days in +/+ mice. Tryptase activities were higher than the control level on day 15 and day 20 in +/+ mice. Histological observations on day 15 and day 20 in +/+ mice revealed that mast cells were abundant at the wound edges but absent at the center. The latent and the active forms of MMP-2 and MMP-9 increased on day 10 and day 15 but recovered nearly to control levels on day 20 in both mice groups. The hydroxyproline contents in W/Wv mice were significantly higher than those in +/+ mice on day 15 and day 20. Furthermore, histological observations revealed that the collagen aggregation at the wound edges was tighter and less interwoven in W/Wv mice compared with +/+ mice. These results suggest that mast cells accumulated at the wound edge may participate in tissue remodeling in the late phase of wound healing.

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