How Bacteria Support Wound Healing
![The skin is the human body’s largest organ.](/getmedia/6f862c3d-05d4-45d1-9fbf-cefb85413737/Microbes-and-Wounds-Embed-1.jpeg?width=500&height=392&ext=.jpeg)
Source: Wikimedia Commons
Why exactly some wounds would have glowed, as well as what the glow could have had to do with healing, remained a mystery until 2001, when 2 high school students at the Intel International Science and Engineering Science Fair. Their research, supported by the USDA Agricultural Research Service, showed that a bioluminescent insect pathogen called Photorhabdus luminescens in the wounds of soldiers with hypothermia, where they may have produced antibiotics that can inhibit the growth of other, infection-causing bacteria. The microbes also glow a cool blue, earning the folkloric nickname “Angel’s Glow” for P. luminescens-infected wounds. Though hard evidence for Angel’s Glow at Shiloh is sparse, a text from 40 years prior describes a "" occurring at the Siege of Mannheim in Germany (1795), suggesting that this phenomenon could have occurred both there and elsewhere.
The takeaway from the story is that although they are usually thought of as agents of disease, including particularly nasty wound infections like gangrene, bacteria can also be important for wound healing. Wound healing itself is a very complex process, involving not only the skin, but also the immune and circulatory systems as the skin surface and underlying tissues patch themselves back up. To add another layer of complexity, the human skin surface is home to a , including bacteria, fungi and viruses that can aid and hamper this delicate process.
The Many Functions of the Skin Microbiota
One of the important functions of the skin microbiota is to keep pathogens away from healing wounds, which double as prime entry sites for microorganisms. This can be accomplished directly, through the that kill potential threats, or indirectly when of pathogens. Another indirect mechanism is for members of the skin microbiota to kick their host’s onto high alert.![A scanning electron microscope image of Staphylococcus epidermidis, a common skin commensal in humans.](/getmedia/7a567920-8bf0-4c52-9203-7e11eedcf3c4/Microbes-and-Wounds-Embed-2.jpg?width=385&height=500&ext=.jpg)
Source: NIAID/Flickr
One well-studied member of the skin microbiota is Staphylococcus epidermidis, which can promote wound healing in many ways. First, it can , such as lipoteichoic acid, which limits inflammation and promotes a transition to the proliferative phase of wound healing, where skin cells multiply and close the wound. Second, S. epidermis can also , encouraging immune cells called T cells to accelerate closure.
Bacteriotherapy to Reduce Biofilm-Forming Microbes
Bacterial skin infections affect , raising the question—can our native skin microbiota be leveraged to treat these kinds of infections? Chronic wounds, such as ulcers, are often at a high risk of infection because of their long healing time, and thus, prolonged period of vulnerability. A with Lactobacillus plantarum has been tested on patients suffering from leg ulcers infected with multiple biofilm-forming bacteria. Though the study did not constitute a clinical trial, L. plantarum application to the wounds appeared to reduce the area of the ulcers, as well as the abundance of pathogens, including Staphylococcus aureus and Pseudomonas aeruginosa, which are common biofilm-forming wound infectors.L. plantarum belongs to a group of bacteria known as Lactic Acid Bacteria (LAB) that are frequently used in probiotic applications. Their frequent use is thanks, in part, to their non-pathogenicity, which confers safety for a variety of applications across healthcare and food science. L. plantarum may achieve its effects not only by wound pathogens, such as P. aeruginosa, but also by interacting with the immune system. L. plantarum treatment seemed to promote the recruitment of neutrophils—those immune first responders—as well as fibroblasts and endothelial cells to the ulcer, which may have contributed to the improved granulation. However, the exact mechanisms, as well as an approved bacteriotherapy treatment, .
Engineering Bacteria to Promote Wound Healing
![There is constant crosstalk between the skin microbiota and the host’s immune system](/getmedia/6b03b7c7-d822-498d-a7c7-e62e6fc0479e/Microbes-and-Wounds-embed-3.png?width=360&height=500&ext=.png)
Source: Swaney M. H. et al./ Infection and Immunity, March 2021
One example of this technique in action comes from a recent study where researchers called Limosilactobacillus reuteri R2LC to produce the human immune chemical messenger CXCL12-α when introduced into a wound. They performed a randomized, blinded and placebo-controlled human study on the treatment, called ILP100-Topical. In addition to being well-tolerated by test subjects, reapplication of ILP100-Topical also helped to shorten healing time and increased the proportion of healed wounds after 19 days.
Studies like this are still few and far between, making them even more special. “I am extremely proud that we have made it all the way to the first in-human study with this project that was started in the lab by one of my Ph.D. students,” said Professor Mia Phillipson from Uppsala University in Sweden, whose research group conducted the study. “This is the first study to be published where this approach was tested in humans to accelerate the healing of induced skin wounds,” she explained.