What is the extracellular matrix?
What are the functions of the ECM?
What are the three stages of after wounding?
Inflammation (2-6days)
Proliferation (6-12 days)
Maturation (12-16 days)
What is the importance of the matrix in regeneration and repair?
What are the two types of cellular-macromolecular organisation?
Interstitial matrix/a.k.a stroma
- spaces between epithelial, endothelial and smooth muscle cells and in connective tissue
Basement membrane
- associated with cell surfaces (epithelial and mesenchymal)
What are the three groups of molecules that form the matrix?
What is important to note about the ECM?
What is collagen?
most common protein in the animal world
How is collagen synthesised?
What is elastin/fibrillin?
associated with:
What is marfan syndrome?
What are the 4 major families of adhesive glycoproteins/integrins?
immunoglobulin cell adhesion molecules
Cadherins
= Ca++ dependent adherence protein, homotypic
- connect plasma membranes of adjacent cells - regulate motility, proliferation and differentiation
Integrins
Selectins
- e.g. neutrophil margination and rolling (E and P selectin)
What is fibronectin?
What is laminin?
What are integrins?
attachment
crucial in
What are cadherins?
What is SPARC?
What are thrombospondins?
What is osteopontin?
What is tenascin?
- cell adhesion
What are proteoglycans?
hyaluronan = MW 8x10^6
What are essential processes in repair?
What is vasculogenesis?
Occurs during development: formation of first blood vessels
1. Hemangioblasts (haemopoietic stem cells)
2. angioblasts + HSCs (form R/WBCs) + Endothelial Precursor Cells (stored in bone marrow, used in adults when undergoing angiogenesis)
angioblasts proliferate, migrate, differentiate
3. endothelial cells
+ pericytes
+ smooth muscle cells
4. vessels (arterioles, venules, capillaries)
What are the two basic ways angiogenesis can happen in adults?