Activin-mediated alterations of the fibroblast transcriptome and matrisome control the biomechanical properties of skin wounds
Abstract
Matrix deposition is essential for wound repair, but when excessive, leads to hypertrophic scars and fibrosis. The factors that control matrix deposition in skin wounds have only partially been identified and the consequences of matrix alterations for the mechanical properties of wounds are largely unknown. Here, we report how a single diffusible factor, activin A, affects the healing process across scales. Bioinformatics analysis of wound fibroblast transcriptome data combined with biochemical and histopathological analyses of wounds and functional in vitro studies identify that activin promotes pro-fibrotic gene expression signatures and processes, including glycoprotein and proteoglycan biosynthesis, collagen deposition, and altered collagen cross-linking. As a consequence, activin strongly reduces the wound and scar deformability, as identified by a non-invasive in vivo method for biomechanical analysis. These results provide mechanistic insight into the roles of activin in wound repair and fibrosis and identify the functional consequences of alterations in the wound matrisome at the biomechanical level. Show more
Permanent link
https://doi.org/10.3929/ethz-b-000417573Publication status
publishedExternal links
Journal / series
Nature CommunicationsVolume
Pages / Article No.
Publisher
NatureOrganisational unit
03520 - Werner, Sabine / Werner, Sabine
03605 - Mazza, Edoardo / Mazza, Edoardo
Funding
179012 - Skin biomechanics and mechanobiology for wound healing and tissue engineering (SNF)
169204 - Role of cytokines and environmental cues in wound repair and inflammatory skin disease (SNF)
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