Department of Visceral Surgery and Medicine, Department for BioMedical Research (DBMR), University of Bern, Bern, Switzerland.
Front Immunol. 2021 May 14;12:684967. doi: 10.3389/fimmu.2021.684967. eCollection 2021.
Most multicellular organisms have a major body cavity containing vital organs. This cavity is lined by a mucosa-like serosal surface and filled with serous fluid which suspends many immune cells. Injuries affecting the major body cavity are potentially life-threatening. Here we summarize evidence that unique damage detection and repair mechanisms have evolved to ensure immediate and swift repair of injuries at serosal surfaces. Furthermore, thousands of patients undergo surgery within the abdominal and thoracic cavities each day. While these surgeries are potentially lifesaving, some patients will suffer complications due to inappropriate scar formation when wound healing at serosal surfaces defects. These scars called adhesions cause profound challenges for health care systems and patients. Therefore, reviewing the mechanisms of wound repair at serosal surfaces is of clinical importance. Serosal surfaces will be introduced with a short embryological and microanatomical perspective followed by a discussion of the mechanisms of damage recognition and initiation of sterile inflammation at serosal surfaces. Distinct immune cells populations are free floating within the coelomic (peritoneal) cavity and contribute towards damage recognition and initiation of wound repair. We will highlight the emerging role of resident cavity GATA6+ macrophages in repairing serosal injuries and compare serosal (mesothelial) injuries with injuries to the blood vessel walls. This allows to draw some parallels such as the critical role of the mesothelium in regulating fibrin deposition and how peritoneal macrophages can aggregate in a platelet-like fashion in response to sterile injury. Then, we discuss how serosal wound healing can go wrong, causing adhesions. The current pathogenetic understanding of and potential future therapeutic avenues against adhesions are discussed.
大多数多细胞生物都有一个包含重要器官的主体腔。这个腔由黏膜样浆膜表面衬里,并充满浆液性液体,其中悬浮着许多免疫细胞。影响主体腔的损伤可能危及生命。在这里,我们总结了证据,表明已经进化出独特的损伤检测和修复机制,以确保浆膜表面损伤的立即和迅速修复。此外,每天都有数千名患者在腹部和胸腔内接受手术。虽然这些手术有潜在的救生作用,但一些患者会因浆膜表面缺陷处的伤口愈合时不当的瘢痕形成而遭受并发症。这些被称为粘连的疤痕给医疗保健系统和患者带来了巨大的挑战。因此,审查浆膜表面伤口修复的机制具有临床意义。浆膜表面将从简短的胚胎学和微观解剖学角度进行介绍,然后讨论浆膜表面损伤识别和无菌性炎症启动的机制。独特的免疫细胞群体在体腔(腹膜)腔内自由漂浮,并有助于损伤识别和伤口修复的启动。我们将强调驻留腔 GATA6+巨噬细胞在修复浆膜损伤中的新兴作用,并将浆膜(间皮)损伤与血管壁损伤进行比较。这使得我们可以得出一些相似之处,例如间皮在调节纤维蛋白沉积中的关键作用,以及腹膜巨噬细胞如何在无菌性损伤时以血小板样的方式聚集。然后,我们讨论浆膜伤口愈合如何出错导致粘连。讨论了对粘连的当前发病机制理解和未来潜在的治疗途径。