GRANULATION TISSUE AS A CONTRACTILE ORGAN
Open Access
- 1 April 1972
- journal article
- Published by Rockefeller University Press in The Journal of Experimental Medicine
- Vol. 135 (4) , 719-734
- https://doi.org/10.1084/jem.135.4.719
Abstract
CONTRACTING GRANULATION TISSUES CONTAIN FIBROBLASTS THAT DEVELOP CHARACTERISTICS TYPICAL OF SMOOTH MUSCLE: (a) They contain an extensive cytoplasmic fibrillar system. (b) They show immunofluorescent labeling of their cytoplasm with human anti-smooth muscle serum. (c) The nuclei show complicated folds and indentations, indicative of cellular contraction. (d) There are cell-to-cell and cell-to-stroma attachments. (e) It is possible to extract similar quantities of actomyosin (having the same adenosine triphosphatase activity) from granulation tissue and from pregnant rat uterus. (f) Strips of granulation tissue, when tested pharmacologically in vitro, behave similarly to smooth muscle. All these data support the view that, under certain conditions, fibroblasts can differentiate into a cell type structurally and functionally similar to smooth muscle and that this cell, the "myo-fibroblast," plays an important role in connective tissue contraction.Keywords
This publication has 24 references indexed in Scilit:
- Fibroblasts of Granulation Tissue: Immunofluorescent Staining with Antismooth Muscle SerumExperimental Biology and Medicine, 1971
- Microfilaments in Cellular and Developmental ProcessesScience, 1971
- Conformational Changes in Myocardial Nuclei of RatsCirculation Research, 1969
- Wound contraction.1967
- The basal attachment of endothelial cellsJournal of Ultrastructure Research, 1966
- ALTERATIONS IN THE CYTOLOGIC DETAIL OF INTESTINAL SMOOTH MUSCLE CELLS IN VARIOUS STAGES OF CONTRACTIONThe Journal of cell biology, 1965
- CLOSE ASSOCIATION BETWEEN ADULT GUINEA-PIG FIBROBLASTS IN TISSUE CULTURE STUDIED WITH ELECTRON MICROSCOPE1964
- CONTRACTION OF COLLAGEN FIBRES IN VIVO INDUCED BY INFLAMMATIONThe Lancet, 1958
- ON THE MECHANISM THROUGH WHICH HYDROCORTISONE AFFECTS THE RESISTANCE OF TISSUES TO INJURYJAMA, 1953
- CICATRIZATION OF WOUNDSThe Journal of Experimental Medicine, 1916