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Roles of focal adhesions and fibronectin-mediated cohesion in proliferation of confluent fibroblasts

✍ Scribed by Maya Tanaka; Tatsuya Abe; Yoshitaka Hara


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2009
Tongue
English
Weight
614 KB
Volume
219
Category
Article
ISSN
0021-9541

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✦ Synopsis


Abstract

Multilayered fibroblast sheets have applications as cell transplants for tissue engineering. One way to increase their therapeutic efficacy is to increase cell numbers in a graft, but the factors influencing multilayered growth remain poorly understood. In this study, we investigated the roles of focal adhesion (FA) assembly and intercellular cohesion through fibronectin (FN) in the proliferation of normal human fibroblasts at confluence. Density‐dependent growth‐arrested fibroblasts resumed DNA synthesis when cultured in multilayer formation medium (MFM) containing transforming growth factor‐β1, ascorbic acid, and serum. This proliferation depended on α5β1‐integrin‐mediated cell‐FN‐cell interactions because blocking them with antibodies inhibited DNA synthesis. However, cell‐FN‐cell cohesion operated well regardless of exposure to MFM, judging from several parameters, including FN matrix deposition, activated β1 integrin expression, and stress fiber development. Density‐arrested cells formed few FAs at the cell center. Exposure of the cells to MFM induced the formation of vinculin‐, paxillin‐, and phosphotyrosine‐containing FAs throughout the ventral cell‐surface, indicating ROCK‐mediated actomyosin contractile force generation. When the assembly of FAs was inhibited with either the ROCK inhibitor Y‐27632 or the myosin II inhibitor blebbistatin, the up‐regulation of DNA synthesis by MFM was suppressed. The drugs did not impair FN matrix deposition, activated β1 integrin expression, and stress fiber development. Thus, these results indicate that the formation of FAs promotes the proliferation of confluent fibroblasts with the support of α5β1‐integrin‐mediated cell‐FN‐cell cohesion. The present findings provide insights into the rational design of high‐density fibroblast transplants. J. Cell. Physiol. 219: 194–201, 2009. © 2008 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.


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