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macrophage subtypes were drastically up-regulated in diabetic wounds. Differential cell-cell communication analyses revealed striking differences in crosstalk dynamics between fibroblast, macrophage and neutrophil subtypes in the early phase of healing, and ligand-receptor interactome analyses identified CD44 as the hub of dysregulated immune cell interactions in diabetic wounds, implicating cell adhesion, migration and inflammatory pathways, especially those mediated by ICAM1. Inhibition of CD44 using blocking antibodies in primary macrophages from db/db mice and via intradermal injections in db/db mice significantly normalized the early wound immune dysfunction, in part by inhibiting ICAM1 and reversing the excessive neutrophil influx into diabetic wounds. A new integrated dataset of single-cell human chronic wound studies revealed similar CD44-mediated immune cell dysfunctions in diabetic vs non-diabetic foot ulcers, pointing to CD44 as a promising therapeutic target for T2DM-associated chronic wounds.
Wietecha et al. (Wed,) studied this question.