| Literature DB >> 26029216 |
James Monslow1, Priya Govindaraju1, Ellen Puré1.
Abstract
Transition from homeostatic to reactive matrix remodeling is a fundamental adaptive tissue response to injury, inflammatory disease, fibrosis, and cancer. Alterations in architecture, physical properties, and matrix composition result in changes in biomechanical and biochemical cellular signaling. The dynamics of pericellular and extracellular matrices, including matrix protein, proteoglycan, and glycosaminoglycan modification are continually emerging as essential regulatory mechanisms underlying cellular and tissue function. Nevertheless, the impact of matrix organization on inflammation and immunity in particular and the consequent effects on tissue healing and disease outcome are arguably under-studied aspects of adaptive stress responses. Herein, we review how the predominant glycosaminoglycan hyaluronan (HA) contributes to the structure and function of the tissue microenvironment. Specifically, we examine the evidence of HA degradation and the generation of biologically active smaller HA fragments in pathological settings in vivo. We discuss how HA fragments versus nascent HA via alternate receptor-mediated signaling influence inflammatory cell recruitment and differentiation, resident cell activation, as well as tumor growth, survival, and metastasis. Finally, we discuss how HA fragmentation impacts restoration of normal tissue function and pathological outcomes in disease.Entities:
Keywords: homeostasis; hyaluronan; matrix; pathogenesis; remodeling
Year: 2015 PMID: 26029216 PMCID: PMC4432798 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2015.00231
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 7.561
Figure 1Agarose gel electrophoresis showing the molecular weight (MW) distribution of commercially available HA (left) and charted for comparison (right). Molecular weight HA ladder (MWL) was purchased from Hyalose (combined mega, high, and low ladders). HA MW is divided into high (HMW >1000 kDa), medium (MMW, 250-1000 kDa), and low (10-250 kDa).
Figure 2Summary and pathological significance of HA size . HA molecular weight (MW) is divided into very high (vHMW 6000-12000 kDa; naked mole rat HA), high (HMW > 1000 kDa), medium (MMW 250-1000 kDa), low (10-250 kDa), and Oligo-HA (< 10 kDa). Green text highlights positive roles for each HA MW in tissue function and recovery, whereas red text favors pathological decline. Opposing and/or unclear tissue responses are designated in orange-colored text.