Diabetic impairments in NO-mediated endothelial progenitor cell mobilization and homing are reversed by hyperoxia and SDF-1α
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Abstract
Endothelial progenitor cells (EPCs) are essential in vasculogenesis and wound healing, but their circulating and wound level numbers are decreased in diabetes. This study aimed to determine mechanisms responsible for the diabetic defect in circulating and wound EPCs. Since mobilization of BM EPCs occurs via eNOS activation, we hypothesized that eNOS activation is impaired in diabetes, which results in reduced EPC mobilization. Since hyperoxia activates NOS in other tissues, we investigated whether hyperoxia restores EPC mobilization in diabetic mice through BM NOS activation. Additionally, we studied the hypothesis that impaired EPC homing in diabetes is due to decreased wound level stromal cell-derived…
Citation impact
670
total citations
- FWCI
- 17.62
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 55
Citations per year
Authors
9Topics & keywords
Topics
Keywords
- Homing (biology)
- Progenitor cell
- Hyperoxia
- Wound healing
- Vasculogenesis
- Medicine
- Endothelial progenitor cell
- Enos
UN Sustainable Development Goals
- Good health and well-being
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