4.6 Article

Intrinsic fibroblast-mediated remodeling of damaged collagenous matrices in vivo

Journal

MATRIX BIOLOGY
Volume 23, Issue 8, Pages 543-555

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/j.matbio.2004.09.008

Keywords

subfailure damage; sprain; scar tissue formation; inflammation; medial collateral ligament; peal-time quantitative polymerase chain reaction (real-time QPCR)

Funding

  1. NIGMS NIH HHS [GM07215] Funding Source: Medline

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Numerous studies have examined wound healing and tissue repair after a complete tissue rupture and reported provisional matrix and scar tissue formation in the injury gap. The initial phases of the repair are largely mediated by the coagulation response and a principally extrinsic inflammatory response followed by type III collagen deposition to form scar tissue that may be later remodeled. In this study, we examine subfaiture (Grade II sprain) damage to collagenous matrices in which no gross tissue gap is present and a localized concentration of provisional matrix or scar tissue does not form. This results in extracellular matrix remodeling that relies heavily upon type I collagen, and associated proteoglycans, and less heavily on type III scar tissue collagen. For instance, following subfailure tissue damage, collagen I and III expression was suppressed after I day, but by day 7 expression of both genes was significantly increased over controls, with collagen I expression significantly larger than type III expression. Concurrent with increased collagen expression were significantly increased expression of the collagen fibrillogenesis supporting proteoglycans fibromodulin, lumican, decorin, the large aggregating proteoglycan versican, and proteases cathepsin K and L. Interestingly, this remodeling process appears intrinsic with little or no inflammation response as damaged tissues show no changes in macrophage or neutrophils levels following injury and expression of the inflammatory markers, tumor necrosis factor-alpha and tartrate-resistant acid phosphatase were unchanged. Hence, since inflammation plays a large role in wound heating by inducing cell migration and proliferation, and controlling extracellular matrix scar fort-nation, its absence leaves fibroblasts to principally direct tissue remodeling. Therefore, following a Grade II subfailure injury to the collagen matrix, we conclude that tissue remodeling is fibroblast-mediated and occurs without scar tissue formation, but instead with type I collagen fibrillogenesis to repair the tissue. As such, this system provides unique insight into acute tissue damage and offers a potentially powerful model to examine fibroblast behavior. (C) 2004 Elsevier B.V/International Society of Matrix Biology. All rights reserved.

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