Litcius/Paper detail

Fibroblasts and immune cells: at the crossroad of organ inflammation and fibrosis

Sasha Smolgovsky, Brandon Theall, Noah Wagner, Pilar Alcaide

2023American Journal of Physiology-Heart and Circulatory Physiology38 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The immune and fibrotic responses have evolved to work in tandem to respond to pathogen clearance and promote tissue repair. However, excessive immune and fibrotic responses lead to chronic inflammation and fibrosis, respectively, both of which are key pathological drivers of organ pathophysiology. Fibroblasts and immune cells are central to these responses, and evidence of these two cell types communicating through soluble mediators or adopting functions from each other through direct contact is constantly emerging. Here, we review complex junctions of fibroblast-immune cell cross talk, such as immune cell modulation of fibroblast physiology and fibroblast acquisition of immune cell-like functions, as well as how these systems of communication contribute to organ pathophysiology. We review the concept of antigen presentation by fibroblasts among different organs with different regenerative capacities, and then focus on the inflammation-fibrosis axis in the heart in the complex syndrome of heart failure. We discuss the need to develop anti-inflammatory and antifibrotic therapies, so far unsuccessful to date, that target novel mechanisms that sit at the crossroads of the fibrotic and immune responses.

Topics & Concepts

Immune systemInflammationFibrosisFibroblastImmunologyBiologyAntigen presentationMedicineCell biologyT cellPathologyCell cultureGeneticsCardiac Fibrosis and RemodelingTissue Engineering and Regenerative MedicineInterstitial Lung Diseases and Idiopathic Pulmonary Fibrosis