Molecular angiogenic events of a two-herb wound healing formula involving MAPK and Akt signaling pathways in human vascular endothelial cells

The emergence of electric cell‐substrate impedance sensing (ECIS) technology has provided new insight in advanced cell behavioral study by its nanometer sensitivity, precise electrical wounds generation, and high reproducibility that can be monitored in real time in a noninvasive way. However, littl...

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Veröffentlicht in:Wound repair and regeneration 2013-07, Vol.21 (4), p.579-587
Hauptverfasser: Liu, Cheuk-Lun, Tam, Jacqueline Chor Wing, Sanders, Andrew J., Ko, Chun-Hay, Fung, Kwok-Pui, Leung, Ping-Chung, Harding, Keith G., Jiang, Wen G., Lau, Clara Bik-San
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The emergence of electric cell‐substrate impedance sensing (ECIS) technology has provided new insight in advanced cell behavioral study by its nanometer sensitivity, precise electrical wounds generation, and high reproducibility that can be monitored in real time in a noninvasive way. However, little is known regarding pro‐angiogenic agents in wound healing studies using endothelial cells evaluated with ECIS technology. Our previous studies showed a prominent wound healing effect of a two‐herb formula (NF3) comprising of Astragali Radix and Rehmanniae Radix in a rat chronic wound model through actions including angiogenesis. Here we further investigated the angiogenic effect and its underlying molecular mechanism through proliferation, motility, and tubule formation of human vascular endothelial cells (HECV) using ECIS technology. It was first shown that HECV treated with NF3 had a higher resistance than that of control using ECIS cell attachment and cell migration model (p 
ISSN:1067-1927
1524-475X
DOI:10.1111/wrr.12055