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[摘要]:Wound and subsequent healing are frequently associated with hypoxia. Although hypoxia induces angiogenesis for tissue remodeling during wound healing, it may also affect the healing response of parenchymal cells. Whether and how wound healing is affected by hypoxia in kidney cells and tissues is currently unknown. Here, we used scratch-wound healing and transwell migration models to examine the effect of hypoxia in cultured renal proximal tubular cells (RPTC). Wound healing and migration were significantly slower in hypoxic (1% oxygen) RPTC than normoxic (21% oxygen) cells. Hypoxia-inducible factor-1 alpha (HIF-1 alpha) was induced during scratch-wound healing in normoxia, and the induction was more evident in hypoxia. Nevertheless, HIF-1 alpha-null and wild-type cells healed similarly after scratch wounding. Moreover, activation of HIF-1 alpha with dimethyloxalylglycine in normoxic cells did not suppress wound healing, negating a major role of HIF-1 alpha in wound healing in this model. Scratch-wound healing was also associated with glycogen synthase kinase 3 beta (GSK3 beta)/beta-catenin signaling, which was further enhanced by hypoxia. Pharmacological inhibition of GSK3 beta resulted in beta-catenin expression, accompanied by the suppression of wound healing and transwell cell migration. Ectopic expression of beta-catenin in normoxic cells could also suppress wound healing, mimicking the effect of hypoxia. Conversely, inhibition of beta-catenin via dominant negative mutants or short hairpin RNA improved wound healing and transwell migration in hypoxic cells. The results suggest that GSK3 beta/beta-catenin signaling may contribute to defective wound healing in hypoxic renal cells and tissues. |
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