4 Works
Macrophage-derived exosomes accelerate wound healing through their anti-inflammation effects in a diabetic rat model
Mengdie Li, Tao Wang, He Tian, Guohua Wei, Liang Zhao & Yijie Shi
Chronic, subclinical inflammation was often observed in the diabetic wound area, causing inadequate and delayed wound-healing effects by failing to initiate cell migration, proliferation, and extracellular matrix deposition. Therefore, we presented macrophage-derived exosomes (Exos) and explored their potential for inhibiting inflammation and accelerating diabetic wound healing in a skin defect, diabetic rat model. A thorough investigation demonstrated that Exos exerted anti-inflammatory effects by inhibiting the secretion of pro-inflammatory enzymes and cytokines. Furthermore, they accelerated the...
Data from: Biomass consumption by surface fires across Earth's most fire prone continent
Brett P. Murphy, Lynda D. Prior, Mark A. Cochrane, Grant J. Williamson & David M. J. S. Bowman
Landscape fire is a key but poorly understood component of the global carbon cycle. Predicting biomass consumption by fire at large spatial scales is essential to understanding carbon dynamics and hence how fire management can reduce greenhouse gas emissions and increase ecosystem carbon storage. An Australia‐wide field‐based survey (at 113 locations) across large‐scale macroecological gradients (climate, productivity and fire regimes) enabled estimation of how biomass combustion by surface fire directly affects continental‐scale carbon budgets. In...
Data from: Tracking genetic diversity in a large-scale oyster restoration program: effects of hatchery propagation and initial characterization of diversity on restored vs. wild reefs
Katherine M. Hornick & Louis V. Plough
The release of hatchery-propagated fish and shellfish is occurring on a global scale, but the genetic impacts of these practices are often not fully understood and rarely monitored. Slow recovery of depleted eastern oyster populations in the Chesapeake Bay, USA has prompted a hatchery-based restoration program focused in the Choptank River, Maryland consisting of the mass release of hatchery-produced juveniles from local, wild broodstock. To evaluate potential genetic effects of this program, we 1) examined...
Macrophage-derived exosomes accelerate wound healing through their anti-inflammation effects in a diabetic rat model
Mengdie Li, Tao Wang, He Tian, Guohua Wei, Liang Zhao & Yijie Shi
Chronic, subclinical inflammation was often observed in the diabetic wound area, causing inadequate and delayed wound-healing effects by failing to initiate cell migration, proliferation, and extracellular matrix deposition. Therefore, we presented macrophage-derived exosomes (Exos) and explored their potential for inhibiting inflammation and accelerating diabetic wound healing in a skin defect, diabetic rat model. A thorough investigation demonstrated that Exos exerted anti-inflammatory effects by inhibiting the secretion of pro-inflammatory enzymes and cytokines. Furthermore, they accelerated the...
Affiliations
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North West Agriculture and Forestry University2
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West China Second University Hospital of Sichuan University2
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West China Hospital of Sichuan University2
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Institute of Hydrobiology2
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Huazhong University of Science and Technology2
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Anhui University of Science and Technology2
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University of North Carolina Health Care2
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Tianjin University2
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Tianjin Medical University Cancer Institute and Hospital2
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International Peace Maternity & Child Health Hospital2