Activation of the EPOR-β common receptor complex by cibinetide ameliorates impaired wound healing in mice with genetic diabetes.
Bitto. Alessandra A; Irrera. Natasha N; Pizzino. Gabriele G; Pallio. Giovanni G; Mannino. Federica F; Vaccaro. Mario M; Arcoraci. Vincenzo V; Aliquò. Federica F; Minutoli. Letteria L; Colonna. Michele R MR; Galeano. Maria Rosaria MR; Brines. Michael M; De Ponte. Chiara C; Collino. Massimo M; Squadrito. Francesco F; Altavilla. Domenica D
Key Findings
- Cibinetide activated the innate repair receptor, leading to higher VEGF, p‑Akt, and p‑eNOS levels in wounds.
- Treated diabetic mice showed lower oxidative stress (malondialdehyde) and higher nitrite/nitrate, indicating better nitric‑oxide signaling.
- Wound closure was faster, angiogenesis increased, and the healed skin was mechanically stronger.
Practical Outcomes
- The study suggests that cibinetide could become a therapeutic option for diabetes‑related wound problems, but it’s still only tested in mice. Biohackers should view this as promising pre‑clinical evidence rather than a ready‑to‑use protocol, and await human safety and dosing data before considering any off‑label use.
Summary
In diabetic mice, a peptide called cibinetide (also known as ara‑290) was given daily and helped wounds heal faster and stronger. It boosted healing signals like VEGF and Akt, reduced oxidative damage, and improved blood vessel growth and scar strength compared to untreated diabetic mice.
Abstract
Diabetes is characterized by poor wound healing which currently lacks an efficacious treatment. The innate repair receptor (IRR) is a master regulator of tissue protection and repair which is expressed as a response injury or metabolic stress, including in diabetes. Activation of the IRR might provide benefit for diabetic wound healing. A specific IRR agonist cibinetide was administered in an incisional wound healing model performed mice with genetic diabetes (db<sup>+</sup>/db<sup>+</sup>) and compared to the normal wild-type. Animals were treated daily with cibinetide (30μg/kg/s.c.) or vehicle and euthanized 3, 7, and 14days after the injury to quantitate vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF), malondialdehyde (MAL), phospho-Akt (pAkt), phospho e-NOS (p-eNOS), and nitrite/nitrate content within the wound. Additional evaluations included quantification of skin histological change, angiogenesis, scar strength, and time to complete wound closure. Throughout the wound healing process diabetic animals treated with vehicle exhibited increased wound MAL with reduced VEGF, pAkt, peNOS and nitrite/nitrate, all associated with poor re-epitheliziation, angiogenesis, and wound breaking strength. Cibenitide administration significantly improved these abnormalities. The results suggest that cibinetide-mediated IRR activation may represent an interesting strategy to treat diabetes-associated wound healing.
Study Information
pubmed
2017
2017-12-07T00:00:00.000Z
10.1016/j.bbadis.2017.12.006
12
43