4.6 Review

Adding insult to injury - Inflammation at the heart of cardiac fibrosis

期刊

CELLULAR SIGNALLING
卷 77, 期 -, 页码 -

出版社

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.cellsig.2020.109828

关键词

Heart failure; Cardiac fibrosis; Inflammation

资金

  1. NIH [HL-144477, HL-144477-02S1, R21 AI142037]

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The fibrotic response works alongside the inflammatory response in facilitating healing after injury, but excessive inflammation and fibrosis can lead to organ tissue damage. Cardiac fibrotic remodeling is a key driver of cardiac dysfunction in heart failure, with the interdependence of immune cell and fibroblast activities playing a crucial role. The search for anti-inflammatory and anti-fibrotic therapies needs to consider the complex interactions between immune cells and fibroblasts in the context of cardiac stresses.
The fibrotic response has evolutionary worked in tandem with the inflammatory response to facilitate healing following injury or tissue destruction as a result of pathogen clearance. However, excessive inflammation and fibrosis are key pathological drivers of organ tissue damage. Moreover, fibrosis can occur in several conditions associated with chronic inflammation that are not directly caused by overt tissue injury or infection. In the heart, in particular, fibrotic adverse cardiac remodeling is a key pathological driver of cardiac dysfunction in heart failure. Cardiac fibroblast activation and immune cell activation are two mechanistic domains necessary for fibrotic remodeling in the heart, and, independently, their contributions to cardiac fibrosis and cardiac inflammation have been studied and reviewed thoroughly. The interdependence of these two processes, and how their cellular components modulate each other's actions in response to different cardiac insults, is only recently emerging. Here, we review recent literature in cardiac fibrosis and inflammation and discuss the mechanisms involved in the fibrosis-inflammation axis in the context of specific cardiac stresses, such as myocardial ischemia, and in nonischemic heart conditions. We discuss how the search for anti-inflammatory and anti-fibrotic therapies, so far unsuccessful to date, needs to be based on our understanding of the interdependence of immune cell and fibroblast activities. We highlight that in addition to the extensively reviewed role of immune cells modulating fibroblast function, cardiac fibroblasts are central participants in inflammation that may acquire immune like cell functions. Lastly, we review the gut-heart axis as an example of a novel perspective that may contribute to our understanding of how immune and fibrotic modulation may be indirectly modulated as a potential area for therapeutic research.

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