Category Ranking

98%

Total Visits

921

Avg Visit Duration

2 minutes

Citations

20

Article Abstract

Perivascular accumulation of lymphocytes can be a prominent histopathologic feature of various human inflammatory skin diseases. Select examples include systemic sclerosis, spongiotic dermatitis, and cutaneous lupus. Although a large body of work has described various aspects of the endothelial and vascular smooth muscle layers in these diseases, the outer adventitial compartment is poorly explored. The goal of the current study was to characterize perivascular adventitial fibroblast states in inflammatory human skin diseases and relate these states to perivascular lymphocyte accumulation. In normal skin, adventitial fibroblasts are distinguished by CD90 expression, and dense perivascular lymphocytic infiltrates are uncommon. In systemic sclerosis, this compartment expands, but lymphocyte infiltrates remain sparse. In contrast, perivascular adventitial fibroblast expression of VCAM1 is upregulated in spongiotic dermatitis and lupus and is associated with a dense perivascular T cell infiltrate. VCAM1 expression marks transitioned fibroblasts that show some resemblance to the reticular stromal cells in secondary lymphoid organs. Expanded adventitial compartments with perivascular infiltrates similar to the human settings were not seen in the inflamed murine dermis. This species difference may hinder the dissection of aspects of perivascular adventitial pathology. The altered perivascular adventitial compartment and its associated reticular network form a niche for lymphocytes and appear to be fundamental in the development of an inflammatory pattern.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6305793PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.4049/jimmunol.1801209DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

perivascular adventitial
20
adventitial fibroblast
12
perivascular
10
skin diseases
8
systemic sclerosis
8
spongiotic dermatitis
8
adventitial compartment
8
dense perivascular
8
adventitial
7
fibroblast specialization
4

Similar Publications

Mesenchymal progenitor cells in perivascular niches: forerunners of mesenchymal stem cells and players in tissue scarring and regeneration.

Vascul Pharmacol

September 2025

Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Orthopaedic Hospital Research Center, UCLA, Los Angeles, CA 90095, USA; Center for Cardiovascular Science, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, UK. Electronic address:

The walls of all embryonic, foetal, and adult blood vessels contain mesodermal progenitors, distributed as pericytes in capillaries and micro vessels, and fibroblastic cells in the tunica adventitia of larger veins and arteries. Following dissociation, selection by flow cytometry, and culture, those perivascular cells turn into bona fide mesenchymal stem cells of which they possess all attributes. In vivo, the adventitial cellular niche supports several spatially-organized subsets of mesodermal progenitors biased toward either osteo-, adipo-, or fibrogenesis, and dominated by more primitive, multi-lineage stem-like cells.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The geroscience hypothesis suggests that understanding underlying ageing mechanisms will enable us to delay aging and lessen age-related disability and diseases. While hallmarks of ageing list multiple contributing factors, role of mechanics has only been recently recognized and increasingly appreciated. Here, we use mouse models of ageing to investigate changes in mechanics of the proximal pulmonary artery, lung and right ventricle function in ageing.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Regulatory T (Treg) cells are well recognized for their role in immune regulation; however, their role in tissue regeneration is not fully understood. This study demonstrates such a role of Tregs in a published preclinical murine model of spontaneous pulmonary fibrosis (PF) expressing a human PF related mutation in the Surfactant Protein-C (SP-C) gene ( ). Genetic crosses of SP-C mice with Foxp3 and Foxp3 lines were utilized to study Treg behavior during PF development.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Immunotherapy of autoimmune diseases has expanded substantially, yet autoimmunity remains incurable, and patients suffer from chronic destructive tissue inflammation that fails to resolve. Mechanisms underlying the endurance of autoimmune memory and the lack of exhaustion are beginning to be understood. Here, we review emerging data on how decentralization of cellular immunity contributes to persistent autoimmune responses and chronicity of autoimmune tissue inflammation.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

There is a body-wide network of interstitial spaces that includes three components: a large-scale fascial network made up of fluid-filled spaces containing collagens and other extracellular matrix components like hyaluronic acid (HA), the peri-vascular/capillary interstitium, and intercellular interstitial spaces. Staining for HA within the colon, skin, and liver has demonstrated spatial continuity of the fascial interstitium across tissue layers and between organs, while continuity of HA staining between perineurial and adventitial sheathes beyond organ boundaries confirmed that they also participate in this body-wide network. We asked whether the pulmonary interstitium comprises a continuous organ-wide network that also connects to the body-wide interstitium via routes along nerves and the vasculature.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF