Extracellular matrix regulation of inflammation in the healthy and injured spinal cord

AD Gaudet, PG Popovich - Experimental neurology, 2014 - Elsevier
Experimental neurology, 2014Elsevier
Throughout the body, the extracellular matrix (ECM) provides structure and organization to
tissues and also helps regulate cell migration and intercellular communication. In the injured
spinal cord (or brain), changes in the composition and structure of the ECM undoubtedly
contribute to regeneration failure. Less appreciated is how the native and injured ECM
influences intraspinal inflammation and, conversely, how neuroinflammation affects the
synthesis and deposition of ECM after CNS injury. In all tissues, inflammation can be …
Abstract
Throughout the body, the extracellular matrix (ECM) provides structure and organization to tissues and also helps regulate cell migration and intercellular communication. In the injured spinal cord (or brain), changes in the composition and structure of the ECM undoubtedly contribute to regeneration failure. Less appreciated is how the native and injured ECM influences intraspinal inflammation and, conversely, how neuroinflammation affects the synthesis and deposition of ECM after CNS injury. In all tissues, inflammation can be initiated and propagated by ECM disruption. Molecules of ECM newly liberated by injury or inflammation include hyaluronan fragments, tenascins, and sulfated proteoglycans. These act as “damage-associated molecular patterns” or “alarmins”, i.e., endogenous proteins that trigger and subsequently amplify inflammation. Activated inflammatory cells, in turn, further damage the ECM by releasing degradative enzymes including matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs). After spinal cord injury (SCI), destabilization or alteration of the structural and chemical compositions of the ECM affects migration, communication, and survival of all cells – neural and non-neural – that are critical for spinal cord repair. By stabilizing ECM structure or modifying their ability to trigger the degradative effects of inflammation, it may be possible to create an environment that is more conducive to tissue repair and axon plasticity after SCI.
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