Journal of Surgical Research
Volume 147, Issue 1 , Pages 15-22, 1 June 2008

Folate Stimulation of Wound DNA Synthesis

Metabolism Unit, Shriners Hospital for Children and Department of Surgery, University of Texas Medical Branch, Galveston, Texas

Received 18 March 2007 published online 23 August 2007.

Background

Whereas nutrition supply is known to be beneficial to wound healing, the role of folate in wound healing is not clear.

Materials and methods

The experiment consisted of a surgery on day 0 and a tracer infusion on day 5 after surgery. During the surgery a donor wound was created on the back and indwelling catheters were inserted in the carotid artery and jugular vein in rabbits under general anesthesia. A pharyngostomy feeding tube was also inserted in a group receiving enteral feeding after injury (TEN group, n = 6), but not in other two groups receiving rabbit chow after injury and intravenous amino acids with or without folate during tracer infusion (IVAA and IVAA-folate groups, n = 6 each). On day 5 stable isotope tracers were infused in conscious rabbits to determine the fractional synthetic rate (FSR) of wound DNA, and FSR and fractional breakdown rate (FBR) of wound protein. In the IVAA-folate group 5-methyltetrahydrofolate (the active form of folate) was infused at 0.1 mg/h during the tracer infusion.

Results

Serum folate concentration in the IVAA-folate group (380 ± 78 ng/mL) was greater (P < 0.001) than those in the TEN (20 ± 6 ng/mL) and IVAA (33 ± 22 ng/mL) groups. DNA FSRs in the IVAA-folate group (5.02 ± 1.26%/d) and in the TEN group (4.51 ± 0.98%/d) were greater (P < 0.01–0.05) than that in the IVAA group (2.87 ± 0.61%/d). In the IVAA and IVAA-folate groups net protein deposition (FSR–FBR) was correlated with chow intake (P < 0.001–0.002).

Conclusions

Folate supplementation has a stimulatory effect on wound DNA synthesis, which would be expected to accelerate wound healing. Nutrition intake is essential for tissue repair by a mechanism that increases net protein deposition in the wound.

Key Words: skin wound, rabbit, stable isotopes, metabolism

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PII: S0022-4804(07)00473-8

doi:10.1016/j.jss.2007.07.012

Journal of Surgical Research
Volume 147, Issue 1 , Pages 15-22, 1 June 2008