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  3. PRF Lysates Modulate Chemokine Expression in Oral Squamous Carcinoma and Healthy Epithelial Cells.
 

PRF Lysates Modulate Chemokine Expression in Oral Squamous Carcinoma and Healthy Epithelial Cells.

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BORIS DOI
10.48620/8384
Date of Publication
July 24, 2024
Publication Type
Article
Division/Institute

School of Dental Medi...

Author
Afradi, Zohreh
Panahipour, Layla
Abbas Zadeh, Salman
Gruber, Reinhard
School of Dental Medicine, Clinic of Periodontology
Subject(s)

600 - Technology::610...

Series
Bioengineering
ISSN or ISBN (if monograph)
2306-5354
Publisher
MDPI
Language
English
Publisher DOI
10.3390/bioengineering11080746
PubMed ID
39199704
Uncontrolled Keywords

HSC2

PRF

TR146

chemokines

inflammation

oral epithelial cells...

oral squamous carcino...

platelet-rich fibrin

Description
Platelet-rich fibrin (PRF), originally used to support soft tissue healing, is also considered a therapeutic option for treating oral lichen planus and leukoplakia. The progression from the two premalignant lesions to the aggressive malignant oral squamous cell carcinoma involves an inflammatory process linked to chemokine expression. Thus, there is a rationale for studying how PRF modulates the expression of chemokines in oral squamous carcinoma cells. To this aim, we expose the oral squamous carcinoma cell line HSC2 to IL1β and TNFα either alone or in the presence of lysates obtained from solid PRF membranes. We report here that in HSC2 cells, PRF lysates significantly reduce the forced transcription of chemokines, e.g., CXCL1, CXCL2, CXCL8, CXCL10, and CCL5. Moreover, PRF lysates attenuate the nuclear translocation of p65 in HSC2 oral epithelial cells when exposed to IL1β and TNFα. PRF lysates further reduce chemokine expression provoked by poly:IC HMW. Even though less pronounced, PRF lysates reduce IL1β- and TNFα-induced chemokine expression in TR146 cells. In primary oral epithelial cells, however, PRF lysates increase the basal expression of CXCL1, CXCL2 and CXCL8. Thus, PRF can exert a biphasic effect on chemokine expression in oral squamous cell carcinoma cell lines and primary oral epithelial cells. These findings suggest that PRF may reduce inflammation in a malignant environment while provoking an immunological response in healthy oral epithelium.
Handle
https://boris-portal.unibe.ch/handle/20.500.12422/44737
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bioengineering-11-00746.pdftextAdobe PDF3.16 MBAttribution (CC BY 4.0)publishedOpen
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