4.7 Article

Principles of Cell Circuits for Tissue Repair and Fibrosis

Journal

ISCIENCE
Volume 23, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.isci.2020.100841

Keywords

-

Funding

  1. Cancer Research UK [C19767/A27145]
  2. Minerva Foundation
  3. Israel Science Foundation [1349/15]
  4. Fulbright Scholar Fellowship
  5. Zuckerman STEM leadership program
  6. Israel National Postdoctoral Award Program for Advancing Women in Science
  7. Howard Hughes Medical Institute (HHMI)
  8. Scleroderma Research Foundation
  9. NIH [AI144152-01]
  10. Jane Coffin Childs postdoctoral fellowship
  11. CRI Donald Gogel postdoctoral fellowship
  12. National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute of the NIH [F31HL139116]
  13. NIH Medical Scientist Training Program Training Grant [T32 GM007205]
  14. BMBF

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Tissue repair is a protective response after injury, but repetitive or prolonged injury can lead to fibrosis, a pathological state of excessive scarring. To pinpoint the dynamic mechanisms underlying fibrosis, it is important to understand the principles of the cell circuits that carry out tissue repair. In this study, we establish a cell-circuit framework for the myofibroblast-macrophage circuit in wound healing, including the accumulation of scar-forming extracellular matrix. We find that fibrosis results from multistability between three outcomes, which we term hot fibrosis characterized by many macrophages, cold fibrosis lacking macrophages, and normal wound healing. This framework clarifies several unexplained phenomena including the paradoxical effect of macrophage depletion, the limited time-window in which removing inflammation leads to healing, and why scar maturation takes months. We define key parameters that control the transition from healing to fibrosis, which may serve as potential targets for therapeutic reduction of fibrosis.

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