Stenmark Kurt R, Gerasimovskaya Evgenia, Nemenoff Raphael A, Das Mita
Developmental Lung Biology Research Laboratory, University of Colorado Health Sciences Center, Denver, CO 80262, USA.
Chest. 2002 Dec;122(6 Suppl):326S-334S. doi: 10.1378/chest.122.6_suppl.326s.
Substantial experimental evidence supports the idea that the fibroblast may play a significant role in the vascular response to injury, especially under hypoxic conditions. Fibroblasts have the ability to rapidly respond to hypoxic stress and to modulate their function to adapt rapidly to local vascular needs. Fibroblasts appear to be uniquely equipped to proliferate, transdifferentiate, and migrate under hypoxic conditions. Proliferative responses to hypoxia depend on the activation of Galpha(i) and Gq kinase family members, and on the subsequent stimulation of protein kinase C and mitogen-activated protein kinase family members. Extracellular nucleotides (eg, adenosine triphosphate [ATP]) are likely to be increased in the hypoxic adventitial compartment and can act as autocrine/paracrine modifiers of the hypoxia-induced proliferative response. The proliferative effects of ATP appear to be mediated largely through G-protein-coupled P2Y receptors in fetal and neonatal fibroblasts. Hypoxia, acting through Galpha(iota)-coupled pathways, also can directly up-regulate alpha-smooth muscle actin expression in fibroblast subpopulations, suggesting that hypoxia may play a direct role in mediating the "transdifferentiation" of fibroblasts into myofibroblasts in the vessel wall. In addition, chronic hypoxia causes stable (at least in vitro) phenotypic changes in fibroblasts that appear to be associated with changes in the signaling pathways used to elicit proliferation. However, it is also becoming clear that, similar to the heterogeneity described for vascular smooth muscle cells, numerous fibroblast subtypes exist in the vessel wall, and that each may respond in unique ways to hypoxia and other stimuli and thus serve special functions in response to injury. In fact, adventitia may be considered to be compartments in which cells with "stem-cell-like" characteristics reside. Future work is needed to determine more precisely the role of the fibroblast in the wide variety of vascular complications observed in many humans diseases, and in the genes and gene products that confer unique properties to this important vascular cell.
大量实验证据支持成纤维细胞可能在血管对损伤的反应中发挥重要作用这一观点,尤其是在缺氧条件下。成纤维细胞有能力快速响应缺氧应激并调节其功能,以迅速适应局部血管需求。在缺氧条件下,成纤维细胞似乎具有独特的增殖、转分化和迁移能力。对缺氧的增殖反应取决于Gα(i)和Gq激酶家族成员的激活,以及随后对蛋白激酶C和丝裂原活化蛋白激酶家族成员的刺激。细胞外核苷酸(如三磷酸腺苷[ATP])在缺氧的外膜区室中可能会增加,并可作为缺氧诱导的增殖反应的自分泌/旁分泌调节剂。ATP的增殖作用似乎主要通过胎儿和新生儿成纤维细胞中的G蛋白偶联P2Y受体介导。通过与Gα(iota)偶联的途径起作用的缺氧,也可直接上调成纤维细胞亚群中α-平滑肌肌动蛋白的表达,这表明缺氧可能在介导成纤维细胞在血管壁中转分化为肌成纤维细胞中起直接作用。此外,慢性缺氧会导致成纤维细胞发生稳定的(至少在体外)表型变化,这些变化似乎与用于引发增殖的信号通路变化有关。然而,同样越来越清楚的是,与血管平滑肌细胞所描述的异质性类似,血管壁中存在多种成纤维细胞亚型,并且每种亚型可能以独特的方式对缺氧和其他刺激作出反应,从而在对损伤的反应中发挥特殊功能。事实上,外膜可被认为是具有“干细胞样”特征的细胞所在的区室。需要进一步的研究来更精确地确定成纤维细胞在许多人类疾病中观察到的各种血管并发症中的作用,以及赋予这种重要血管细胞独特特性的基因和基因产物的作用。