İskelet Kası Dejenerasyonu Sürecinde Stromal Hücre Alt Gruplarının İncelenmesi
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Date
2017Author
Özdemir Saka, Cansu
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The characteristics of the skeletal
muscle degeneration are muscle fiber atrophy and fibrosis. The genetic and cellular
therapeutic approaches for skeletal muscle treatment remain incapable due to the
fibrosis. Studies concerning the cellular development of fibrosis demonstrated that
“Fibro/Adipogenic progenitors (FAP)” ((CD45(-), CD31(-), CD11b(-), Sca1(+),
CD140a(+)), are the primary stromal cell population that causes fibrosis and their
activation is related to inflammation. However, the effect of FAP cells on the fibrosis
development in chronic muscle degeneration is still unknown in the absence of
inflammation. In this thesis, changes of stromal cell populations including
CD140a(+)/Sca1(-), CD140a(+)/Sca1(+), and CD140a(-)/Sca1(+) was examined in
experimental acute muscle injury, tenotomy, and denervation models. In addition,
the correlation between cell activation and inflammation was investigated. Our
results showed that CD140a(+)/Sca1(+) cells drastically increased and Sca1(+)/
CD140a(-) cell population was limited cellular activation in the presence of acute
muscle injury. Only CD140a(-)/Sca1(+) cell population was activated in tenotomy
while CD140a(+)/Sca1(+) cells was activated in denervation. In all three
experimental models, there were no significant quantitative differences in terms of
CD140a(+)/Sca1(-) cell population. This thesis study proved that the activation of
stromal cells in chronic degeneration model occurs inflammation-independent and
the CD140a(-)/Sca1(+) cell population which is active in tenotomy and acute muscle
injury is different from CD140a(+)/Sca1(+) stromal cell population. In addition, these
cells have been shown to contribute fibrosis development as a result of RNA
sequencing analysis.
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