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The myofibroblast, a key cell in normal and pathological tissue repair

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-01, 23:42 authored by Ian Darby, Noraina Zakuan, Fabrice Billet, Alexis Desmouliere
Myofibroblasts are characterized by their expression of α-smooth muscle actin, their enhanced contractility when compared to normal fibroblasts and their increased synthetic activity of extracellular matrix proteins. Myofibroblasts play an important role in normal tissue repair processes, particularly in the skin where they were first described. During normal tissue repair, they appear transiently and are then lost via apoptosis. However, the chronic presence and continued activity of myofibroblasts characterize many fibrotic pathologies, in the skin and internal organs including the liver, kidney and lung. More recently, it has become clear that myofibroblasts also play a role in many types of cancer as stromal or cancer-associated myofibroblast. The fact that myofibroblasts are now known to be key players in many pathologies makes understanding their functions, origin and the regulation of their differentiation important to enable them to be regulated in normal physiology and targeted in fibrosis, scarring and cancer.

History

Journal

Cellular and Molecular Life Sciences

Volume

73

Issue

6

Start page

1145

End page

1157

Total pages

13

Publisher

Springer

Place published

Switzerland

Language

English

Copyright

© Springer International Publishing 2015

Former Identifier

2006059720

Esploro creation date

2020-06-22

Fedora creation date

2016-03-11

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