Dube, C. T., Oguz, G., Ong, Y. H. B., Sudhagar, S., Prabhakar, S., Ronshaugen, M., Ramasamy, A., Lim, C. Y., & Mace, K. A. (2025). Intrinsic changes in cell differentiation and identity drive impaired wound healing in aged female murine skin. Biogerontology, 26(6). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10522-025-10340-w
Abstract:
Abstract
Cellular and molecular mechanisms that drive a perturbed wound microenvironment and impaired healing in aged skin have not been fully delineated. To obtain a comprehensive understanding of cell-intrinsic changes acquired during ageing that impact early responses to injury, we performed single-cell RNA sequencing in young and aged intact female murine skin and wounds 3 days post-injury. We observed that substantial changes in the mean proportional distribution and transcriptomic state of skin resident subpopulations in aged, but not young, tissues accompany a global increase in basal inflammation. This is driven by an altered signalling environment leading to impaired keratinocyte differentiation, loss of fibroblast identity and defective macrophage function. Further, we show that ageing-induced changes in skin resident cells persist after injury, resulting in increased expression of senescence-related genes in wound fibroblasts and aberrant monocyte-to-macrophage transitioning coupled to an enhanced inflammatory signature and defective intercellular signalling in comparison to wounds in young mice. In summary, our data highlights a contribution of both cell-intrinsic changes and an altered tissue microenvironment to poor wound healing responses in aged mice.
License type:
Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0)
Funding Info:
There was no specific funding for the research done