| Literature DB >> 33508427 |
Li Wan1, Dongsheng Jiang1, Donovan Correa-Gallegos1, Pushkar Ramesh1, Jiakuan Zhao1, Haifeng Ye1, Shaohua Zhu1, Juliane Wannemacher1, Thomas Volz2, Yuval Rinkevich3.
Abstract
Deep and voluminous skin wounds are repaired with scars, by mobilization of fibroblasts and extracellular matrix from fascia, deep below the skin. The molecular trigger of this novel repair mechanism is incompletely understood. Here we reveal that the gap junction alpha-1 protein (Connexin43, Cx43) is the key to patch repair of deep wounds. By combining full-thickness wound models with fibroblast lineage specific transgenic lines, we show Cx43 expression is substantially upregulated in specialized fibroblasts of the fascia deep beneath the skin that are responsible for scar formation. Using live imaging of fascia fibroblasts and fate tracing of the fascia extracellular matrix we show that Cx43 inhibition disrupts calcium oscillations in cultured fibroblasts and that this inhibits collective migration of fascia EPFs necessary to mobilize fascia matrix into open wounds. Cell-cell communication through Cx43 thus mediates matrix movement and scar formation, and is necessary for patch repair of voluminous wounds. These mechanistic findings have broad clinical implications toward treating fibrosis, aggravated scarring and impaired wound healing.Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33508427 DOI: 10.1016/j.matbio.2021.01.005
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Matrix Biol ISSN: 0945-053X Impact factor: 11.583