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BET bromodomain inhibitors regulate keratinocyte plasticity

Authors :
Schutzius, Gabi
Kolter, Christian
Bergling, Sebastian
Tortelli, Federico
Fuchs, Florian
Renner, Steffen
Guagnano, Vito
Cotesta, Simona
Rueeger, Heinrich
Faller, Michael
Bouchez, Laure
Salathe, Adrian
Nigsch, Florian
Richards, Shola M.
Louis, Malvina
Gruber, Viktoria
Aebi, Alexandra
Turner, Jonathan
Grandjean, Frederic
Li, Jun
Dimitri, Chris
Thomas, Jason R.
Schirle, Markus
Blank, Jutta
Drueckes, Peter
Vaupel, Andrea
Tiedt, Ralph
Manley, Paul W.
Klopp, Julia
Hemmig, Rene
Zink, Florence
Leroy, Nelly
Carbone, Walter
Roma, Guglielmo
Keller, Caroline Gubser
Dales, Natalie
Beyerbach, Armin
Zimmerlin, Alfred
Bonenfant, Debora
Terranova, Remi
Berwick, Amy
Sahambi, Sukhdeep
Reynolds, Aimee
Jennings, Lori L.
Ruffner, Heinz
Tarsa, Peter
Bouwmeester, Tewis
Driver, Vickie
Frederiksen, Mathias
Lohmann, Felix
Kirkland, Susan
Source :
Nature Chemical Biology; March 2021, Vol. 17 Issue: 3 p280-290, 11p
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Although most acute skin wounds heal rapidly, non-healing skin ulcers represent an increasing and substantial unmet medical need that urgently requires effective therapeutics. Keratinocytes resurface wounds to re-establish the epidermal barrier by transitioning to an activated, migratory state, but this ability is lost in dysfunctional chronic wounds. Small-molecule regulators of keratinocyte plasticity with the potential to reverse keratinocyte malfunction in situ could offer a novel therapeutic approach in skin wound healing. Utilizing high-throughput phenotypic screening of primary keratinocytes, we identify such small molecules, including bromodomain and extra-terminal domain (BET) protein family inhibitors (BETi). BETi induce a sustained activated, migratory state in keratinocytes in vitro, increase activation markers in human epidermis ex vivo and enhance skin wound healing in vivo. Our findings suggest potential clinical utility of BETi in promoting keratinocyte re-epithelialization of skin wounds. Importantly, this novel property of BETi is exclusively observed after transient low-dose exposure, revealing new potential for this compound class.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
15524450 and 15524469
Volume :
17
Issue :
3
Database :
Supplemental Index
Journal :
Nature Chemical Biology
Publication Type :
Periodical
Accession number :
ejs55177428
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41589-020-00716-z