| Literature DB >> 26568664 |
Jakub Kryczka1, Joanna Boncela1.
Abstract
Skin tissue scar formation and fibrosis are often characterized by the increased production and deposition of extracellular matrix components, accompanied by the accumulation of a vast number of myofibroblasts. Scaring is strongly associated with inflammation and wound healing to regain tissue integrity in response to skin tissue injury. However, increased and uncontrolled inflammation, repetitive injury, and individual predisposition might lead to fibrosis, a severe disorder resulting in the formation of dense and stiff tissue that loses the physical properties and physiological functions of normal tissue. Fibrosis is an extremely complicated and multistage process in which bone marrow-derived leukocytes act as both pro- and antifibrotic agents, and therefore, few, if any, effective therapies are available for the most severe and lethal forms of fibrosis. Herein, we discuss the current knowledge on the multidimensional impact of leukocytes on the induction of fibrosis, focusing on skin fibrosis.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26568664 PMCID: PMC4629055 DOI: 10.1155/2015/652035
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mediators Inflamm ISSN: 0962-9351 Impact factor: 4.711
Figure 1The stages of wound healing. 1, coagulation: after injury, fibrin clot is formed. Trapped platelets degranulate and release inflammatory chemokines. 2, inflammation: leukocytes enter wound site. Neutrophils appear first, followed by macrophages and lymphocytes. Leukocytes clear wound from bacteria and any foreign bodies, respectively, recruiting fibroblasts. 3, proliferation: activated fibroblasts, myofibroblasts, produce and deposit ECM components that serve as skeleton during tissue regeneration process. 4, remodeling, the final stage in normal wound healing: excess amount of ECM is degraded, fibroblasts and myofibroblasts undergo apoptosis, and inflammatory cells leave regenerated tissue. However, during fibrosis, inflammation is prolonged and ECM deposition is highly increased by myofibroblasts.
Figure 2The divergent macrophage activation pathway. Macrophage activation and differentiation from monocyte in the wounded tissue depends on chemokine and growth factors availability. Two macrophage activation pathways might be distinguished, classical activation (M1) depending on interferon gamma (IFN-γ) and tumor necrosis factor-α (TNF-α) and alternative activation pathway (M2). Alternative activation is divided into two separate macrophage populations, IL-4 and IL-13 derived wound-healing macrophage population and TGF-β derived regulatory macrophage population. Despite monocyte origin, different activation pathway results in production and secretion of different chemokines and proteins into wounded tissue.
Figure 3The comprehensive view on complex leukocytes impact on fibrotic tissue formation. The direct impact depends on ECM components production and deposition by leukocytes, such as fibrocytes and wound-healing macrophages. The indirect impact is composed of variety of different chemokines and growth factors interacting with cells, which in turn leads to ECM deposition.