npj Regenerative Medicine (Oct 2024)

A computational model reveals an early transient decrease in fiber cross-linking that unlocks adult regeneration

  • Anastasia Pacary,
  • Diane Peurichard,
  • Laurence Vaysse,
  • Paul Monsarrat,
  • Clémence Bolut,
  • Adeline Girel,
  • Christophe Guissard,
  • Anne Lorsignol,
  • Valérie Planat-Benard,
  • Jenny Paupert,
  • Marielle Ousset,
  • Louis Casteilla

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41536-024-00373-z
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 1
pp. 1 – 9

Abstract

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Abstract The decline in regeneration efficiency after birth in mammals is a significant roadblock for regenerative medicine in tissue repair. We previously developed a computational agent based-model (ABM) that recapitulates mechanical interactions between cells and the extracellular-matrix (ECM), to investigate key drivers of tissue repair in adults. Time calibration alongside a parameter sensitivity analysis of the model suggested that an early and transient decrease in ECM cross-linking guides tissue repair toward regeneration. Consistent with the computational model, transient inhibition or stimulation of fiber cross-linking for the first six days after subcutaneous adipose tissue (AT) resection in adult mice led to regenerative or scar healing, respectively. Therefore, this work positions the computational model as a predictive tool for tissue regeneration that with further development will behave as a digital twin of our in vivo model. In addition, it opens new therapeutic approaches targeting ECM cross-linking to induce tissue regeneration in adult mammals.