AI Article Synopsis

  • Telocytes are specialized stromal cells found in various tissues, including human skin, and have been studied for their role in systemic sclerosis (SSc), a connective tissue disease characterized by skin and organ fibrosis.
  • Research using immunohistochemistry and electron microscopy revealed that telocytes are present in the dermis, identifiable by CD34 expression, but are absent of markers typical of other cell types like endothelial cells and fibroblasts.
  • In SSc patients, telocytes exhibit significant damage and loss, which may disrupt the extracellular matrix organization and impair skin healing, with more severe effects noted in diffuse SSc.

Article Abstract

Telocytes, a peculiar type of stromal cells, have been recently identified in a variety of tissues and organs, including human skin. Systemic sclerosis (SSc, scleroderma) is a complex connective tissue disease characterized by fibrosis of the skin and internal organs. We presently investigated telocyte distribution and features in the skin of SSc patients compared with normal skin. By an integrated immunohistochemical and transmission electron microscopy approach, we confirmed that telocytes were present in human dermis, where they were mainly recognizable by their typical ultrastructural features and were immunophenotypically characterized by CD34 expression. Our findings also showed that dermal telocytes were immunophenotypically negative for CD31/PECAM-1 (endothelial cells), α-SMA (myofibroblasts, pericytes, vascular smooth muscle cells), CD11c (dendritic cells, macrophages), CD90/Thy-1 (fibroblasts) and c-kit/CD117 (mast cells). In normal skin, telocytes were organized to form three-dimensional networks distributed among collagen bundles and elastic fibres, and surrounded microvessels, nerves and skin adnexa (hair follicles, sebaceous and sweat glands). Telocytes displayed severe ultrastructural damages (swollen mitochondria, cytoplasmic vacuolization, lipofuscinic bodies) suggestive of ischaemia-induced cell degeneration and were progressively lost from the clinically affected skin of SSc patients. Telocyte damage and loss evolved differently according to SSc subsets and stages, being more rapid and severe in diffuse SSc. Briefly, in human skin telocytes are a distinct stromal cell population. In SSc skin, the progressive loss of telocytes might (i) contribute to the altered three-dimensional organization of the extracellular matrix, (ii) reduce the control of fibroblast, myofibroblast and mast cell activity, and (iii) impair skin regeneration and/or repair.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3822649PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/jcmm.12028DOI Listing

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