肌成纤维细胞
细胞外基质
成纤维细胞
细胞生物学
疤痕
伤口愈合
生物
病理
细胞分化
免疫学
医学
纤维化
细胞培养
基因
遗传学
作者
Xing Fu,Hadi Khalil,Onur Kanisicak,Justin G. Boyer,Ronald J. Vagnozzi,Bryan D. Maliken,Michelle A. Sargent,Vikram Prasad,Íñigo Valiente-Alandí,Burns C. Blaxall,Jeffery D. Molkentin
摘要
Fibroblasts are a dynamic cell type that achieve selective differentiated states to mediate acute wound healing and long-term tissue remodeling with scarring. With myocardial infarction injury, cardiomyocytes are replaced by secreted extracellular matrix proteins produced by proliferating and differentiating fibroblasts. Here, we employed 3 different mouse lineage-tracing models and stage-specific gene profiling to phenotypically analyze and classify resident cardiac fibroblast dynamics during myocardial infarction injury and stable scar formation. Fibroblasts were activated and highly proliferative, reaching a maximum rate within 2 to 4 days after infarction injury, at which point they expanded 3.5-fold and were maintained long term. By 3 to 7 days, these cells differentiated into myofibroblasts that secreted abundant extracellular matrix proteins and expressed smooth muscle α-actin to structurally support the necrotic area. By 7 to 10 days, myofibroblasts lost proliferative ability and smooth muscle α-actin expression as the collagen-containing extracellular matrix and scar fully matured. However, these same lineage-traced initial fibroblasts persisted within the scar, achieving a new molecular and stable differentiated state referred to as a matrifibrocyte, which was also observed in the scars of human hearts. These cells express common and unique extracellular matrix and tendon genes that are more specialized to support the mature scar.
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