4.7 Article

Expression of mast cell growth modulating and chemotactic factors and their receptors in human cutaneous scars

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JOURNAL OF INVESTIGATIVE DERMATOLOGY
卷 116, 期 3, 页码 387-393

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ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1046/j.1523-1747.2001.01284.x

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GM-CSF; NGF; SCF; TGF beta; wound healing

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In order to explore possible mechanisms involved in the previously documented turnover of mast cell subpopulations in human cutaneous scars, we have examined selected factors known to stimulate and/or modulate mast cell hyperplasia (SCF, NGF, TGF beta1, GM-CSF) and their receptors in human cutaneous scar tissue. On immunohistochemistry, numbers of SCF- and TGF beta1-positive cells were significantly increased in the epidermis and throughout the dermis in scars (n = 27) of varying ages (4-369 d old), compared with normal skin (n = 12). Furthermore, TR beta RI, II, and the NGF-p75 receptors were significantly increased in the epidermis, TR beta RI and NGF-TrkA throughout the dermis, and TR beta RII, NGF-p75, and GM-CSFR only in the mid- and lower dermis of scars. NGF and GM-CSF expression was in contrast scarce and weak, with no differences between normal skin and scars. In tissue extracts, mRNA levels of SCF, TGF beta1, TR betaI and II, and both NGF-receptors, but not GM-CSFR, were significantly increased as well. TR betaI and II were identified in up to 90% and 83%, respectively, of isolated normal skin mast cells on flow cytometry, and GM-CSFR and NGFR-p75 were identified on 70% and 73%, respectively, of avidin-positive normal mast cells on double immunofluorescence microscopy. As described before for the SCF receptor KIT, GM-CSFR and NGFR-p75 were partly or entirely downregulated on avidin-positive mast cells in scars. The marked upregulation of TGF beta1, its type I and II receptors, and SCF suggest that these factors play a major role in the orchestration of mast cell increase in human cutaneous scars whereas the role of NGF and GM-CSF is less clear, despite the significant upregulation of their receptors.

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