Injury triggers fascia fibroblast collective cell migration to drive scar formation through N-cadherin

Scars are more severe when the subcutaneous fascia beneath the dermis is injured upon surgical or traumatic wounding. Here, we present a detailed analysis of fascia cell mobilisation by using deep tissue intravital live imaging of acute surgical wounds, fibroblast lineage-specific transgenic mice, a...

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Veröffentlicht in:Nature communications 2020-11, Vol.11 (1), p.5653-5653, Article 5653
Hauptverfasser: Jiang, Dongsheng, Christ, Simon, Correa-Gallegos, Donovan, Ramesh, Pushkar, Kalgudde Gopal, Shruthi, Wannemacher, Juliane, Mayr, Christoph H., Lupperger, Valerio, Yu, Qing, Ye, Haifeng, Mück-Häusl, Martin, Rajendran, Vijayanand, Wan, Li, Liu, Juan, Mirastschijski, Ursula, Volz, Thomas, Marr, Carsten, Schiller, Herbert B., Rinkevich, Yuval
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Scars are more severe when the subcutaneous fascia beneath the dermis is injured upon surgical or traumatic wounding. Here, we present a detailed analysis of fascia cell mobilisation by using deep tissue intravital live imaging of acute surgical wounds, fibroblast lineage-specific transgenic mice, and skin-fascia explants (scar-like tissue in a dish – SCAD). We observe that injury triggers a swarming-like collective cell migration of fascia fibroblasts that progressively contracts the skin and form scars. Swarming is exclusive to fascia fibroblasts, and requires the upregulation of N-cadherin. Both swarming and N-cadherin expression are absent from fibroblasts in the upper skin layers and the oral mucosa, tissues that repair wounds with minimal scar. Impeding N-cadherin binding inhibits swarming and skin contraction, and leads to reduced scarring in SCADs and in animals. Fibroblast swarming and N-cadherin thus provide therapeutic avenues to curtail fascia mobilisation and pathological fibrotic responses across a range of medical settings. Extensive scars develop in deep wounds as opposed to superficial wounds but it is unclear why. Here, the authors use live imaging of physiologic wounds and scars formed ex vivo to show that fascia fibroblasts upregulate N-cadherin allowing coordinated cell migration that drives extensive scar formation of deep wounds.
ISSN:2041-1723
2041-1723
DOI:10.1038/s41467-020-19425-1