Fibrosis is associated with organ failure and high mortality and is commonly characterized by aberrant myofibroblast accumulation. Investigating the cellular origin of myofibroblasts in various diseases is thus a promising strategy for developing targeted anti-fibrotic treatments. Recent studies using genetic lineage tracing technology have implicated diverse organ-resident perivascular mesenchymal stem cell (MSC)-like cells and bone marrow-MSCs in myofibroblast generation during fibrosis development. In this Review, we give an overview of the emerging role of MSCs and MSC-like cells in myofibroblast-mediated fibrotic disease in the kidney, lung, heart, liver, skin, and bone marrow.
- El Agha, E.
- Kramann, R.
- Schneider, R. K.
- Li, X.
- Seeger, W.
- Humphreys, B. D.
- Bellusci, S.
Keywords
- Animals
- Fibrosis
- Humans
- Mesenchymal Stem Cells/*metabolism
- Organ Specificity
- *lineage tracing
- *mesenchymal stem cells
- *organ fibrosis