Litcius/Paper detail

Fibroblasts—Warriors at the Intersection of Wound Healing and Disrepair

Jesse Roman

2023Biomolecules38 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Wound healing is triggered by inflammation elicited after tissue injury. Mesenchymal cells, specifically fibroblasts, accumulate in the injured tissues, where they engage in tissue repair through the expression and assembly of extracellular matrices that provide a scaffold for cell adhesion, the re-epithelialization of tissues, the production of soluble bioactive mediators that promote cellular recruitment and differentiation, and the regulation of immune responses. If appropriately deployed, these processes promote adaptive repair, resulting in the preservation of the tissue structure and function. Conversely, the dysregulation of these processes leads to maladaptive repair or disrepair, which causes tissue destruction and a loss of organ function. Thus, fibroblasts not only serve as structural cells that maintain tissue integrity, but are key effector cells in the process of wound healing. The review will discuss the general concepts about the origins and heterogeneity of this cell population and highlight the specific fibroblast functions disrupted in human disease. Finally, the review will explore the role of fibroblasts in tissue disrepair, with special attention to the lung, the role of aging, and how alterations in the fibroblast phenotype underpin disorders characterized by pulmonary fibrosis.

Topics & Concepts

FibroblastWound healingCell biologyFibrosisExtracellular matrixMesenchymal stem cellInflammationMyofibroblastPopulationBiologyImmune systemImmunologyPhenotypeRegeneration (biology)CellPathologyMedicineCell cultureGeneticsEnvironmental healthGeneMesenchymal stem cell researchTissue Engineering and Regenerative MedicineInterstitial Lung Diseases and Idiopathic Pulmonary Fibrosis