Literature DB >> 9129232

Human epidermal keratinocytes are a source of tenascin-C during wound healing.

M Latijnhouwers1, M Bergers, M Ponec, H Dijkman, M Andriessen, J Schalkwijk.   

Abstract

Tenascin-C is a large hexameric extracellular matrix glycoprotein that is expressed in a temporally and spatially restricted pattern associated with stromal-epithelial interactions. In adult human skin, the expression level of tenascin-C is low, but tenascin-C is abundantly present in the dermal compartment during embryogenesis and wound healing and in skin tumors. Herein we have investigated the cellular source of tenascin-C production in human skin, both in vivo and in vitro, by using immunohistochemistry, mRNA in situ hybridization, western blotting, and an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. In addition we studied the cell-matrix interaction between epidermal keratinocytes and purified tenascin-C. By using in vitro culture models, we found that keratinocytes not only synthesize and secrete tenascin-C but can also deposit tenascin-C in de-epidermized dermis in a pattern that is very similar to that in vivo. In vivo, during wound healing of normal human skin, we found tenascin-C extracellularly in the wound bed and also in a granular pattern within the neo-epidermis. By mRNA in situ hybridization, we could identify the basal migrated keratinocytes as the main source of tenascin-C in the early phase of wound healing. In the granulation phase, tenascin-C expression by the keratinocytes is downregulated. Cultured keratinocytes were found to adhere poorly to tenascin-C, and those that did adhere retained a rounded morphology. We conclude that human keratinocytes are a major source of tenascin-C during the early phase of wound healing, and we hypothesize that tenascin-C is unlikely to be an adhesive substrate for migrating keratinocytes.

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Year:  1997        PMID: 9129232     DOI: 10.1111/1523-1747.ep12292170

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Invest Dermatol        ISSN: 0022-202X            Impact factor:   8.551


  10 in total

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Review 4.  Tenascin-C and integrins in cancer.

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5.  Genomic and proteomic evaluation of tissue quality of porcine wounds treated with negative pressure wound therapy in continuous, noncontinuous, and instillation modes.

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8.  The role of tenascin-C in tissue injury and tumorigenesis.

Authors:  Kim S Midwood; Gertraud Orend
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9.  The Streptococcus pyogenes fibronectin/tenascin-binding protein PrtF.2 contributes to virulence in an influenza superinfection.

Authors:  Andrea L Herrera; Haddy Faal; Danielle Moss; Leslie Addengast; Lauren Fanta; Kathleen Eyster; Victor C Huber; Michael S Chaussee
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10.  Effects of Tenascin C on the Integrity of Extracellular Matrix and Skin Aging.

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  10 in total

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