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1.
Front Cell Neurosci ; 18: 1402479, 2024.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38962511

RESUMO

Wound healing of the central nervous system (CNS) is characterized by the classical phases of 'hemostasis', 'inflammation', 'proliferation', and 'remodeling'. Uncontrolled wound healing results in pathological scar formation hindering tissue remodeling and functional recovery in the CNS. Initial blood protein extravasation and activation of the coagulation cascade secure hemostasis in CNS diseases featuring openings in the blood-brain barrier. However, the relevance of blood-derived coagulation factors was overlooked for some time in CNS wound healing and scarring. Recent advancements in animal models and human tissue analysis implicate the blood-derived coagulation factor fibrinogen as a molecular link between vascular permeability and scar formation. In this perspective, we summarize the current understanding of how fibrinogen orchestrates scar formation and highlight fibrinogen-induced signaling pathways in diverse neural and non-neural cells that may contribute to scarring in CNS disease. We particularly highlight a role of fibrinogen in the formation of the lesion border between the healthy neural tissue and the fibrotic scar. Finally, we suggest novel therapeutic strategies via manipulating the fibrinogen-scar-forming cell interaction to improve functional outcomes.

2.
Glia ; 70(7): 1251-1266, 2022 07.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35244976

RESUMO

Reactive astrocytes at the border of damaged neuronal tissue organize into a barrier surrounding the fibrotic lesion core, separating this central region of inflammation and fibrosis from healthy tissue. Astrocytes are essential to form the border and for wound repair but interfere with neuronal regeneration. However, the mechanisms driving these astrocytes during central nervous system (CNS) disease are unknown. Here we show that blood-derived fibrinogen is enriched at the interface of lesion border-forming elongated astrocytes after cortical brain injury. Anticoagulant treatment depleting fibrinogen reduces astrocyte reactivity, extracellular matrix deposition and inflammation with no change in the spread of inflammation, whereas inhibiting fibrinogen conversion into fibrin did not significantly alter astrocyte reactivity, but changed the deposition of astrocyte extracellular matrix. RNA sequencing of fluorescence-activated cell sorting-isolated astrocytes of fibrinogen-depleted mice after cortical injury revealed repressed gene expression signatures associated with astrocyte reactivity, extracellular matrix deposition and immune-response regulation, as well as increased gene expression signatures associated with astrocyte metabolism and astrocyte-neuron communication. Systemic pharmacologic depletion of fibrinogen resulted in the absence of elongated, border-forming astrocytes and increased the survival of neurons in the lesion core after cortical injury. These results identify fibrinogen as a critical trigger for lesion border-forming astrocyte properties in CNS disease.


Assuntos
Astrócitos , Gliose , Animais , Astrócitos/metabolismo , Sistema Nervoso Central/metabolismo , Fibrinogênio/metabolismo , Gliose/patologia , Inflamação/metabolismo , Camundongos
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