In the last decade PhotoBioModulation therapy (PBM) gained importance in clinical practice, thanks to the technological development of low cost lights sources in a broad wavelength range. In wound management, PBM has been listed as physical therapy and blue light has been used in case of insufficient healing, as in chronic and hard-to-heal wounds. In our previous study in in vivo model, we demonstrated that blue light (410-430 nm) can modulate fibroblasts activity in superficial wounds. Here, we present a study about the effects of blue light (3.43-6.87-13.7-20.6-30.9 and 41.2 J/cm2 doses applied, 410–430 nm, 0.69 W/cm2 power density) on cellular metabolism, proliferation and viability of human fibroblasts obtained from keloid and perilesional tissues, compared with fibroblasts isolated from healthy skin. Excessive healing, where fibrotic tissue is formed, is an aberration in wound healing, denoted by keloids and hypertrophic scars. In the study, electrophysiology was used to investigate the effects on membrane currents while Raman spectroscopy revealed the mitochondrial Cytochrome C oxidase dependence on blue light irradiation. Also, the keratinocytes cell line was tested and co-cultures were prepared to perform scratch test assays. Finally, a simple model to study the effectiveness of light irradiation in cells in the depth tissue, was optimized using a dermal substitute. Overall, these data demonstrate that PBM can be used as an innovative and minimally-invasive approach in wound management not only in case of insufficient healing, but also in skin fibrosis, in association with standard treatments.
Keloids are an exuberant response to cutaneous wound healing, characterized by an exaggerated synthesis of collagen probably due to the increase of fibroblasts activity and their proliferation rate. Currently, there are not definitive treatments or pharmacological therapies able to prevent keloid formation and its recurrence. In the last years, physical treatments have been proposed and among them the photobiomodulation therapy. In this work, the effects of Blue LED light (410-430 nm wavelength, 0.69 W/cm2 power density, 5÷60s treatment time) were evaluated on seven boundary keloid tissues by using two different colorimetric assays. Micro-Raman spectroscopy was used to explore direct effects of the Blue LED light on the endogenous cellular redox system and in particular to probe any variation in the oxidation state of the photosensitive heme-protein Cytochrome C (Cyt C) upon irradiation. We also investigated the effects of Blue LED light on membrane currents correlated to cell cycle modulation by patch-clamp recordings. Twenty-four hours after irradiation, a significant reduction of cell metabolism and proliferation was observed. The decrease in cell metabolism was maintained up to 48 hours when we found also an increased reduction in cell proliferation. Electrophysiological recordings showed an enhancement of voltage-dependent outward currents elicited by a depolarizing ramp protocol after a 30s irradiation. Data indicates that Blue LED light irradiation directly affects human keloid fibroblasts: it possesses a long lasting inhibitory effect on cell metabolism and proliferation whereas acutely increases membrane currents. Similar responses were obtained in our recent works conducted on human keloid tissues. The proposed photomodulation treatment by using Blue LED light represents a non-invasive approach in the management of hypertrophic scars and keloids.
Keloids scars are an abnormal overgrowth of fibrotic tissue in response to an injury. The current treatments show several limits and do not represent a definitive solution or a prevention protocol. In a preliminary study, we irradiated two samples of human keloid fibroblasts with a Blue LED light, evidencing a possible modulation of their activity in vitro. In the current study, we use primary fibroblasts cultures from eight keloid tissues (from seven selected patients undergoing aesthetic surgery). The fibroblasts were irradiated with a Blue LED light and the treatment time was varied in the range 5÷60s. After irradiation, cell metabolism and cell proliferation were studied by the use of two colorimetric tests, CCK-8 and SRB (Sigma-Aldrich, Saint Louis, Missouri, USA). The analysis was performed 24 and 48h after the treatment. We thus evidenced that the Blue LED light induces a modulation of the fibroblasts metabolism; this effect is particularly evident at 30s irradiation time. We also evaluated the impact of Blue LED light on membrane currents by performing whole-cell patch-clamp recordings. We observed a significant increase of voltage dependent outward currents activated by a depolarizing ramp-protocol upon Blue LED light irradiation (@30s exposure). This effect was maintained in K+ free-solutions, thus ruling out the involvement of K+ channels. In conclusion, we demonstrated that the Blue LED light has a photobiomodulation effect in fibroblasts from human keloids. This effect can be proposed as a possible treatment of the wound site in human patients to prevent keloid scars occurrence.
Blue LED light irradiation is currently under investigation because of its effect in wound healing improvement. In this context, several mechanisms of action are likely to occur at the same time, consistently with the presence of different light absorbers within the skin. In our previous studies we observed the wound healing in superficial abrasions in an in vivo murine model. The results evidenced that both inflammatory infiltrate and myofibroblasts activity increase after irradiation. In this study we focused on evaluating the consequences of light absorption in fibroblasts from human cells culture: they play a key role in wound healing, both in physiological conditions and in pathological ones, such as keloid scarring. In particular we used keloids fibroblasts as a new target in order to investigate a possible metabolic or cellular mechanism correlation. Human keloid tissues were excised during standard surgery and immediately underwent primary cell culture extraction. Fibroblasts were allowed to grow in the appropriate conditions and then exposed to blue light. A metabolic colorimetric test (WST-8) was then performed. The tests evidenced an effect in mitochondrial activity, which could be modulated by the duration of the treatment. Electrophysiology pointed out a different behavior of irradiated fibroblasts. In conclusion, the Blue LED light affects the metabolic activity of fibroblasts and thus the cellular proliferation rate. No specific effect was found on keloid fibroblasts, thus indicating a very basic intracellular component, such as cytochromes, being the target of the treatment.
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