Fibrotic diseases are still a serious concern for public health, due to their high prevalence, complex etiology and lack of successful treatments. Fibrosis consists of excessive accumulation of extracellular matrix components. As a result, the structure and function of tissues are impaired, thus potentially leading to organ failure and death in several chronic diseases. Myofibroblasts represent the principal cellular mediators of fibrosis, due to their extracellular matrix producing activity, and originate from different types of precursor cells, such as mesenchymal cells, epithelial cells and fibroblasts. Profibrotic activation of myofibroblasts can be triggered by a variety of mechanisms, including the transforming growth factor-β signall...
Fibrosis, which affects millions of individuals worldwide, is a leading cause of organ failure. For ...
Fibrotic diseases remain a major cause of morbidity and mortality, yet there are few effective thera...
Progression of fibrosis involves interstitial hypercellularity, matrix accumulation, and atrophy of ...
Progression of fibrosis involves interstitial hypercellularity, matrix accumulation, and atrophy of ...
Tissue fibrosis, or scar formation, is the common final pathway of virtually all chronic diseases an...
For decades we have known that the overgrowth, hardening and scarring of tissues (so-called fibrosis...
Fibroblasts are the principal cellular component of the connective tissue. They are a heterogeneous ...
Physiol 307: C2–C13, 2014. First published April 16, 2014; doi:10.1152/ajpcell.00060.2014.—Tissue fi...
Fibroblasts are the principal cellular component of the connective tissue. They are a heterogeneous ...
Fibroblasts are the principal cellular component of the connective tissue. They are a heterogeneous ...
Myofibroblasts are non-muscular contractile cells that occur physiologically in organs such as in st...
Organ fibrosis is a common final pathway of long-lasting and iterative tissue fibrosis, and is prese...
Organ fibrosis is a pathological condition associated with chronic inflammatory diseases. In fibrosi...
Fibrosis is defined as an excessive deposition of connective tissue components and can affect virtua...
AbstractThe fibrotic diseases encompass a wide spectrum of entities including such multisystemic dis...
Fibrosis, which affects millions of individuals worldwide, is a leading cause of organ failure. For ...
Fibrotic diseases remain a major cause of morbidity and mortality, yet there are few effective thera...
Progression of fibrosis involves interstitial hypercellularity, matrix accumulation, and atrophy of ...
Progression of fibrosis involves interstitial hypercellularity, matrix accumulation, and atrophy of ...
Tissue fibrosis, or scar formation, is the common final pathway of virtually all chronic diseases an...
For decades we have known that the overgrowth, hardening and scarring of tissues (so-called fibrosis...
Fibroblasts are the principal cellular component of the connective tissue. They are a heterogeneous ...
Physiol 307: C2–C13, 2014. First published April 16, 2014; doi:10.1152/ajpcell.00060.2014.—Tissue fi...
Fibroblasts are the principal cellular component of the connective tissue. They are a heterogeneous ...
Fibroblasts are the principal cellular component of the connective tissue. They are a heterogeneous ...
Myofibroblasts are non-muscular contractile cells that occur physiologically in organs such as in st...
Organ fibrosis is a common final pathway of long-lasting and iterative tissue fibrosis, and is prese...
Organ fibrosis is a pathological condition associated with chronic inflammatory diseases. In fibrosi...
Fibrosis is defined as an excessive deposition of connective tissue components and can affect virtua...
AbstractThe fibrotic diseases encompass a wide spectrum of entities including such multisystemic dis...
Fibrosis, which affects millions of individuals worldwide, is a leading cause of organ failure. For ...
Fibrotic diseases remain a major cause of morbidity and mortality, yet there are few effective thera...
Progression of fibrosis involves interstitial hypercellularity, matrix accumulation, and atrophy of ...