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Hoffmann, R. A wiki for the life sciences where authorship matters. Nature Genetics (2008)
 
 
 
 
 

Lymphocyte participation in wound healing. Morphologic assessment using monoclonal antibodies.

To investigate lymphocyte participation in wound healing, the migration of T lymphocyte subsets into healing wounds and subcutaneously implanted polyvinyl alcohol sponges was studied. Frozen sections of 5-, 7-, and 10-day-old incisional wounds and sponges from Lewis rats were stained with mouse anti-rat monoclonal antibodies. Cellular staining to OX1 (all leucocyte), W3/25 (helper/effector T lymphocytes), and OX8 (suppressor/cytotoxic T lymphocytes) was quantitated in two arbitrarily defined areas based on maximal cellular infiltration: the superficial wound, down to and including the papillary dermis, and the deep wound, the reticular dermis. Five-day wounds were significantly more cellular than 10-day wounds in the deep portion (p less than 0.05) and somewhat more cellular in the superficial section (p less than 0.10). Approximately 2:1 W3/25 to OX8 ratios were noted for wound strips on all days. At 5 and 10 days there are twice as many W3/25 and OX8 labeled cells in the deep wound as in the superficial portion. At 7 days there is a peak in surface W3/25 and OX8 lymphocytes, whereas the deep population remains constant. Seven- and 10-day sponge granulomas demonstrate ratios similar to the wound strips (5-day sponge lymphocytic infiltration was insufficient to count). The data demonstrate that lymphocyte subpopulation participation in wound healing is a dynamic and distinctive process.[1]

References

  1. Lymphocyte participation in wound healing. Morphologic assessment using monoclonal antibodies. Fishel, R.S., Barbul, A., Beschorner, W.E., Wasserkrug, H.L., Efron, G. Ann. Surg. (1987) [Pubmed]
 
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