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			by April McCarthy 
			
			February 17, 2013  
			
			from
			
			PreventDisease Website 
			
			
			
			Spanish version 
			
			  
			
			  
			
			  
			
				
					
						| 
						 
						April McCarthy is a 
						community journalist playing an active role reporting 
						and analyzing world events to advance our health and 
						eco-friendly initiatives.   | 
					 
				 
			 
			
			 
  
			
			 
			For the first time scientists studying the cellular processes 
			underlying the body's response to healing have revealed how a 
			flash of calcium is the very first step in repairing damaged 
			tissue.  
			
			  
			
			The findings (Calcium 
			Signaling - Deciphering the Calcium-NFAT Pathway), 
			published in Current Biology, could lead to new therapies 
			that speed up the healing process following injury. 
  
			
			  
			
			  
			
			  
			
			 
			Until recently, very little was known about how damaged tissue 
			activates and attracts the first white blood cells to the wound - 
			the first stage in the healing process.  
			
			  
			
			However, researchers from the University 
			of Bristol's School of Biochemistry in collaboration with a team 
			from the University of Bath, have shown that the very first trigger 
			in this process is a flash of calcium which spreads like a wave back 
			from the wound edge through gap junctions that connect all the 
			cells. 
			 
			This flash of calcium signal goes on to activate an enzyme known as 
			
			DUOX that synthesizes 
			
			hydrogen peroxide (H2O2), which, in turn, attracts 
			the first white blood cells to the wound. This white blood cell 
			invasion, which is initiated during our inflammatory responses, is 
			needed to kill off invading microbes and stop the onset of 
			septicemia following tissue damage. 
			 
			The findings indicate that the wound-induced calcium flash 
			represents the earliest identified signal following wounding and 
			might therefore orchestrate the rapid recruitment of immune cells. 
			 
			To assess the impact of a reduced calcium flash upon the 
			inflammatory response the team used 
			
			Drosophila (fruit fly) embryos 
			because they are translucent which makes it easy to image the 
			inflammatory response and because of their simple genetics.  
			
			  
			
			The team found that blocking the calcium 
			flash inhibited H2O2 release at the wound site 
			leading to a reduction in the number of immune cells migrating to 
			the wound. 
			 
			Paul Martin, Professor of Cell Biology and an expert in wound 
			healing at the University, said:  
			
				
				"White blood cells are a little like 
				'Jekyll and Hyde' in that they help us heal but are also the 
				reason behind why we scar so we really need to know how they are 
				regulated at wounds in order to learn how to control their 
				behaviors for future therapeutic intervention." 
			 
			
			Will Razzell, the lead PhD 
			researcher on this study, added:  
			
				
				"We are more than ever understanding 
				the pathways that lead to immune cell attraction to wounds. As 
				calcium represents the immediate inflammatory signal, we now 
				have a good foundation to investigate this complicated process 
				further." 
			 
			
			  
			
			
			  
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