Harnessing Microbiome-Mediated and Macrophage-Driven Mechanisms for Oral Wound Healing
Keerthi Priya Chinniampalayam Sekar, Bianca Schmiliver, Paige Elizabeth Pieterick, Tim Cha, Helly A. Patel, Hope Robinson, Prashant Kumar, David T. Wu, Rheinallt Jones, Steven Goudy

TL;DR
This paper reviews how the oral microbiome and macrophages work together to promote fast and effective healing of mouth wounds.
Contribution
The paper provides a synthesis of how the oral microbiome influences macrophage behavior during wound healing and explores potential microbiome-based therapies.
Findings
Oral wounds heal quickly with minimal scarring despite microbial exposure.
Macrophages switch from pro-inflammatory to anti-inflammatory states to aid healing.
Microbiome-based strategies could modulate immune responses to improve wound repair.
Abstract
Oral mucosa healing is a complex process that involves the innate wound healing system, including the coagulation cascade, extracellular matrix remodeling, immune cell responses, and fibroblast and epithelial responses, within the context of a dynamic resident microbiome. Unlike cutaneous wounds, oral wounds heal rapidly with minimal scarring despite constant exposure to diverse microbial communities, saliva, and mechanical stress. Emerging evidence highlights the critical interplay between microbiome-mediated signaling and macrophage plasticity in shaping wound outcomes, suggesting that similar mechanisms operate within the oral cavity. Inflammation is an essential component of wound repair, and its resolution is necessary to promote tissue remodeling and functional regeneration. Macrophages play a central role in this transition through phenotype switching from a pro-inflammatory (M1)…
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Taxonomy
TopicsWound Healing and Treatments · Oral microbiology and periodontitis research · Bacterial biofilms and quorum sensing
