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Macrophage Targeted Photodynamic Regulation of Wound Healing
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 02 July 2020
Extract
Wound healing is coordinated by the diverse activities of cells of the monocyte/macrophage lineage.1 Macrophage depletion impairs wound healing, while overexpression of macrophage products is associated with chronic inflammatory states. If light-activatable pharmacologic agents could be selectively targeted to macrophages, clinical conditions resulting from overexpression such as postsurgical adhesions, hypertrophic scarring, and the formation of intimal hyperplasia could be suppressed. Similarly, adjusting light dose parameters to provide a stimulatory effect could selectively enhance wound repair processes.
To test these hypothesis, photoactivatable cytotoxins (photosensitizers, PS) coupled to specific receptor ligands have been evaluated for localization in cells found in cutaneous tissue using a non-invasive imaging method, two-photon microscopy.
The two-photon microscope (TPM) has been found to be a useful tool for imaging cells with submicron resolution thus allowing for the determination of photosensitizer localization within cells. Additional uses of the TPM will include imaging into epithelial tissue grown in culture and tracking cells in wounds.
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- Pathology
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- Copyright © Microscopy Society of America