| Literature DB >> 21923916 |
Abstract
Fibronectin (FN) is a ubiquitous extracellular matrix (ECM) glycoprotein that plays vital roles during tissue repair. The plasma form of FN circulates in the blood, and upon tissue injury, is incorporated into fibrin clots to exert effects on platelet function and to mediate hemostasis. Cellular FN is then synthesized and assembled by cells as they migrate into the clot to reconstitute damaged tissue. The assembly of FN into a complex three-dimensional matrix during physiological repair plays a key role not only as a structural scaffold, but also as a regulator of cell function during this stage of tissue repair. FN fibrillogenesis is a complex, stepwise process that is strictly regulated by a multitude of factors. During fibrosis, there is excessive deposition of ECM, of which FN is one of the major components. Aberrant FN-matrix assembly is a major contributing factor to the switch from normal tissue repair to misregulated fibrosis. Understanding the mechanisms involved in FN assembly and how these interplay with cellular, fibrotic and immune responses may reveal targets for the future development of therapies to regulate aberrant tissue-repair processes.Entities:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21923916 PMCID: PMC3182887 DOI: 10.1186/1755-1536-4-21
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Fibrogenesis Tissue Repair ISSN: 1755-1536
Figure 1Fibronectin (FN) and FN fragments. FN is composed of a series of FNI repeats (dark-gray boxes), FNII repeats (circles), conserved FNIII repeats (light-gray boxes) and alternatively spliced FNIII repeats (EDA).
Cellular fibronectin (FN) isoforms reported during physiological and pathological conditions
| FN isoform | Characteristics | |
|---|---|---|
| Physiological wound healing | ||
| EIIIA | Expressed in tubular basement membrane by endothelium in rat model of acute renal failure; involved in regeneration of proximal tubules | [ |
| Increased expression by alveolar septal cells, albeolar macrophages and endothelial cells upon acute hyperoxic lung injury | [ | |
| Absence results in abnormal wound healing in EIIIA-/- mice | [ | |
| Expressed in rat model of liver injury by sinusoidal endothelial cells | [ | |
| EIIIB | Increased levels in blood plasma after acute major trauma | [ |
| Increased expression by chondrocytes in muscularized arteries upon acute hyperoxic lung injury | [ | |
| EIIIA and EIIIB | Observed in granulation tissue by 7 days; EIIIB+ levels remain increased even after 14 days; EIIIA+ found around arterioles in connective tissue adjacent to the wound after 4 days | [ |
| Deposited in basement membrane zone of keratectomy wound models of corneal injury in rats | [ | |
| Detected in ulcerated gastric tissue in rat models | [ | |
| EIIIA, EIIIB and V | All isoforms upregulated during rat corneal wound healing | [ |
| Pathological conditions | ||
| EIIIA | Idiopathic pulmonary fibrotic fibroblasts isolated from patients express higher levels of EIIIA+FN | [ |
| Involved in lung fibrogenesis in rat models of pulmonary fibrosis | [ | |
| Highly expressed in mesangium and interstitium in rat glioblastoma multiforme and Habu snake venom models of renal fibrosis | [ | |
| Increased expression in acute and chronic cutaneous graft-versus-host disease | [ | |
| Increased in fibrotic periglomerular regions and areas of interstitial fibrosis | [ | |
| Increased expression in human hepatic fibrosis | [ | |
| Can induce the conversion of lipocytes to myofibroblasts; may play a role in hepatic fibrogenesis | [ | |
| EIIIB | Increased in obsolescent glomeruli | [ |
| EIIIA and EIIIB | Increased in glomerulosclerotic lesions and fibrous crescents | [ |
| Tumorigenesis | ||
| EIIIA | Increased expression in hepatocellular carcinomas | [ |
| EIIIB | Increased expression in interstitium and vascular intima of many primary human tumors including meningioma | [ |
| Expressed around neovasculature and stroma of many malignant head and neck tumors | [ | |
| Detected around tumor stroma, tumor vasculature and in tissue adjacent to the invasion front of oral squamous cell carcinomas | [ | |
| Detected in the stroma, in the cytoplasm of tumor cells and endothelial cells in the neovasculature of head and neck squamous cell carcinomas | [ | |
| EIIIA and EIIIB | Expressed in tumor blood vessels in mouse model of pancreatic tumorigenesis | [ |
| Present around the blood vessels of intratumoral microvessels in breast carcinomas. | [ | |
| Other | ||
| EIIIA | Increased plasma levels in synovial fluid of rheumatoid arthritic joints | [ |
| EIIIA, EIIIB and V | Increased expression in rat model of hypertension, especially of EIIIA+ form after 21 d | [ |
Figure 2Functions of plasma and cellular fibronectin (FN) during wound healing. The different forms of FN play distinct roles during the different stages of wound healing.
Figure 3Stages of fibronectin (FN)-matrix assembly: initiation, unfolding and fibrillar assembly. (A) FN initiation involves interactions with cell-surface receptors: (i) FNI1-5 within the 70-kDa domain binds to cell-surface receptors possibly including integrins, (ii) FNIII9-10 binds to integrin α5β1, (iii) integrin activation by outside-in or inside-out signaling induces integrins to adopt a high-affinity state and allow FN binding and (iv) FNIII12-14 binds to heparan sulfate proteoglycans (HSPGs). (B) FN unfolding: (i) FN binding to cell-surface receptors induces cyctoskeletal reorganization of the actin cytoskeleton and myosin II-dependent contractility that results in (ii) receptor clustering and translation. This causes the tethered FN molecules to become unfolded. (C) Unfolding of FN results in the exposure of FN binding sites that allow FN-FN intermolecular interactions to occur. The domains important for each step are circled and denoted.
Fibronectin (FN)-binding integrins.
| FN receptor | Supports fibrillogenesis | Domain | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| α3β1 | + | 70-kDa | [ |
| α4β1 | + | IIICS (V) CS1 region and EIIIA | [ |
| α5β1 | + | FNIII9-10 (RGD) | [ |
| α9β1 | - | EIIIA | [ |
| α8β1 | - | FNIII10 (RGD) | [ |
| αvβ1 | - | FNIII10 (RGD) | [ |
| αvβ3 | + | FNIII10 (RGD) or possibly 70-kDa | [ |
| αvβ6 | + | FNIII10 (RGD) | [ |
| αIIbβ3 | + | FNIII9-10 (RGD) | [ |
+ = Has been reported to be involved in FN fibrillogenesis.
- = Has been reported to be involved in adhesion to FN but not fibrillogenesis.
Regulators of fibronectin (FN) mRNA expression and assembly
| References | |
|---|---|
| Positive regulators of FN mRNA | |
| TGF-β1 and the TGF-β family | [ |
| Platelet-derived growth factor-BB | [ |
| Insulin-like growth factor-1 | [ |
| Hepatocyte growth factor | [ |
| Glucose | [ |
| Glucocorticoids | [ |
| Negative regulators of FN mRNA | |
| Cell contractility inhibitor | [ |
| RhoA inhibitors | [ |
| Positive regulators of FN assembly | |
| Sphingosine-1-phosphate | [ |
| Estrogen | [ |
| Plasminogen activator inhibitor type I | [ |
| Urokinase plasminogen receptor | [ |
| Connective tissue growth factor | [ |
| Lipoprotein A | [ |
TGF = transforming growth factor.