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Thrown for a loop: fibro-adipogenic progenitors in skeletal muscle fibrosis

Taryn Loomis, Lucas Smith

2023American Journal of Physiology-Cell Physiology33 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Fibro-adipogenic progenitors (FAPs) are key regulators of skeletal muscle regeneration and homeostasis. However, dysregulation of these cells leads to fibro-fatty infiltration across various muscle diseases. FAPs are the key source of extracellular matrix (ECM) deposition in muscle, and disruption to this process leads to a pathological accumulation of ECM, known as fibrosis. The replacement of contractile tissue with fibrotic ECM functionally impairs the muscle and increases muscle stiffness. FAPs and fibrotic muscle form a progressively degenerative feedback loop where, as a muscle becomes fibrotic, it induces a fibrotic FAP phenotype leading to further development of fibrosis. In this review, we summarize FAPs' role in fibrosis in terms of their activation, heterogeneity, contributions to fibrotic degeneration, and role across musculoskeletal diseases. We also discuss current research on potential therapeutic avenues to attenuate fibrosis by targeting FAPs.

Topics & Concepts

FibrosisExtracellular matrixSkeletal muscleAdipogenesisRegeneration (biology)Progenitor cellMyocyteMedicineBiologyCell biologyPathologyInternal medicineAdipose tissueStem cellMuscle Physiology and DisordersConnective tissue disorders researchKnee injuries and reconstruction techniques
Thrown for a loop: fibro-adipogenic progenitors in skeletal muscle fibrosis | Litcius