Death as rebirth: how efferocytosis drives tissue repair and disease treatment
Xinliang Duan, Sichen Han, Yifu Bian, Yao Yuan, Jiayu Shen, Yixuan Dai, Junzi Mi, Zilin Wang

TL;DR
This paper explores how the process of efferocytosis, where dead cells are cleared, can be harnessed to repair tissues and treat diseases using advanced materials.
Contribution
The paper introduces a multidisciplinary strategy combining nanomaterials and biomaterials to enhance efferocytosis for regenerative medicine.
Findings
Efferocytosis dysfunction is linked to diseases like atherosclerosis and cancer.
Nanomaterials and hydrogels can be used to modulate efferocytosis for tissue repair.
Combining therapies can address tumor immunosuppression and wound vascularization.
Abstract
Efferocytosis is a crucial process by which apoptotic cells are removed by phagocytes such as macrophages. It not only maintains tissue homeostasis and immune tolerance, but also plays a central role in tissue repair and disease regulation. In recent years, dysfunction of efferocytosis has been found to be closely related to various diseases, such as atherosclerosis, cancer, and chronic inflammatory conditions. Activating or remodeling efferocytosis has become a key direction in regenerative medicine and precision therapy. This review systematically summarizes the molecular mechanisms and immunomodulatory functions of efferocytosis, highlights its roles in various models of tissue injury and repair, and explores recent advances in targeted modulation of efferocytosis using nanomaterials, biomaterial scaffolds, and hydrogels. By focusing on the biological logic of “life from death,” this…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPhagocytosis and Immune Regulation · Immune responses and vaccinations · Immune cells in cancer
