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American Journal of Pathology, Vol 152, 485-493, Copyright © 1998 by American Society for Investigative Pathology


REGULAR ARTICLES

Enhanced expression of transforming growth factor-beta type I and type II receptors in wound granulation tissue and hypertrophic scar

P Schmid, P Itin, G Cherry, C Bi and DA Cox
Dermatology Research, Novartis Pharma AG, Basel, Switzerland. peter- 1.schmid@pharma.novartis.com

In the present study we have analyzed and compared, by immunohistochemistry and in situ hybridization, the expression pattern of the R4/ALK5 transforming growth factor (TGF)-beta type I receptor (RI) and the TGF-beta type II receptor (RII) in normal human skin, in wounded skin at various stages during the transition of wound granulation tissue to scar, and in long-persisting post-burn hypertrophic scars. In normal human skin, expression of RI and RII was clearly visible in the epidermis, in epidermal appendages, and in vascular cells, although only a small number of dermal fibroblasts revealed detectable levels of TGF-beta receptor expression. In contrast, granulation tissue fibroblasts showed strong expression of both TGF-beta receptor types, although in normal-healing excisional wounds their density decreased during granulation tissue remodeling. However, in post-burn hypertrophic scars, RI- and RII-overexpressing fibroblasts were found in high densities up to 20 months after injury. From these findings we suggest that the repair process of deep wounds involves the transformation of a subset of fibroblastic cells toward an increased TGF-beta responsiveness and a transient accumulation of these cells at the wound site. In addition, our study provides evidence that excessive scarring is associated with a failure to eliminate TGF-beta receptor-overexpressing fibroblasts during granulation tissue remodeling, which leads to a persistent autocrine, positive feedback loop that results in over-production of matrix proteins and subsequent fibrosis.


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