Fibroblast biology. Signals targeting the synovial fibroblast in arthritis
- PMID: 11094447
- PMCID: PMC130135
- DOI: 10.1186/ar111
Fibroblast biology. Signals targeting the synovial fibroblast in arthritis
Abstract
Fibroblast-like cells in the synovial lining (type B lining cells), stroma and pannus tissue are targeted by many signals, such as the following: ligands binding to cell surface receptors; lipid soluble, small molecular weight mediators (eg nitric oxide [NO], prostaglandins, carbon monoxide); extracellular matrix (ECM)-cell interactions; and direct cell-cell contacts, including gap junctional intercellular communication. Joints are subjected to cyclic mechanical loading and shear forces. Adherence and mechanical forces affect fibroblasts via the ECM (including the hyaluronan fluid phase matrix) and the pericellular matrix (eg extracellular matrix metalloproteinase inducer [EMMPRIN]) matrices, thus modulating fibroblast migration, adherence, proliferation, programmed cell death (including anoikis), synthesis or degradation of ECM, and production of various cytokines and other mediators [1]. Aggressive, transformed or transfected mesenchymal cells containing proto-oncogenes can act in the absence of lymphocytes, but whether these cells represent regressed fibroblasts, chondrocytes or bone marrow stem cells is unclear.
References
-
- Konttinen YT, Saari H, Santavirta S, Antti-Poika I, Sorsa T, Nykanen P, Kemppinen P. Synovial fibroblasts. Scand J Rheumatol. 1988;76:95–103. - PubMed
-
- Springer TA. Adhesion receptors of the immune system. . Nature. 1990;346:425–434. - PubMed
-
- Callard RE, Gearing AJH. The Cytokine Facts London: Academic Press. 1994.
-
- Ohgoda O, Sakai A, Koga H, Kanai K, Miyazaki T, Niwano Y. Fibroblast-migration in a wound model of ascorbic acid-supplemented three-dimensional culture system: the effects of cytokines and malotilate, a new wound healing stimulant, on cell-migration. J Dermatol Sci. 1998;17:123–131. - PubMed
-
- Ware MF, Wells A, Lauffenburger DA. Epidermal growth factor alters fibroblast migration speed and directional persistence reciprocally and in a matrix-dependent manner. J Cell Sci. 1998;111:2423–2432. - PubMed
Publication types
MeSH terms
LinkOut - more resources
Full Text Sources
Medical
Miscellaneous
