Macrophages, Wound Healing, and Fibrosis: Recent Insights
- PMID: 29550962
- DOI: 10.1007/s11926-018-0725-5
Macrophages, Wound Healing, and Fibrosis: Recent Insights
Abstract
Purpose of review: Macrophages are central players in the immune response following tissue injury. These cells perform many functions, and the changing tissue microenvironment during injury shapes macrophage phenotype down a variety of polarized pathways. This review summarizes the current knowledge on the roles of macrophages during different stages of tissue injury, repair, and-if repair is not achieved-fibrosis.
Recent findings: Macrophages present early in inflammation are functionally distinct from those at later stages. The predominant macrophage phenotype must transition from pro-inflammatory to pro-reparative to facilitate wound healing and scar resolution. If macrophages fail to acquire a tissue-healing phenotype, dysregulated signals can be drivers of disease processes, such as sustained, exuberant inflammation-as occurs in arthropathies-and fibrosis. Comprehensive understanding of the roles of specific macrophage populations at different stages of the repair process will support the development of immune-targeted therapies for diseases such as fibrosis.
Keywords: Fibrosis; Immunosuppression; Leukocyte; Macrophage; Scarring; Wound repair.
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