| Literature DB >> 33401711 |
Sara Panizo1, Laura Martínez-Arias1, Cristina Alonso-Montes1, Pablo Cannata2, Beatriz Martín-Carro1, José L Fernández-Martín1, Manuel Naves-Díaz1, Natalia Carrillo-López1, Jorge B Cannata-Andía1.
Abstract
Fibrosis is a process characterized by an excessive accumulation of the extracellular matrix as a response to different types of tissue injuries, which leads to organ dysfunction. The process can be initiated by multiple and different stimuli and pathogenic factors which trigger the cascade of reparation converging in molecular signals responsible of initiating and driving fibrosis. Though fibrosis can play a defensive role, in several circumstances at a certain stage, it can progressively become an uncontrolled irreversible and self-maintained process, named pathological fibrosis. Several systems, molecules and responses involved in the pathogenesis of the pathological fibrosis of chronic kidney disease (CKD) will be discussed in this review, putting special attention on inflammation, renin-angiotensin system (RAS), parathyroid hormone (PTH), fibroblast growth factor 23 (FGF23), Klotho, microRNAs (miRs), and the vitamin D hormonal system. All of them are key factors of the core and regulatory pathways which drive fibrosis, having a great negative kidney and cardiac impact in CKD.Entities:
Keywords: FGF23; Klotho; PTH; RAS; artificial intelligence; fibrosis; image analysis; inflammation; microRNAs; vitamin D
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Year: 2021 PMID: 33401711 PMCID: PMC7795409 DOI: 10.3390/ijms22010408
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923