7 research outputs found

    GRANULATION TISSUE AS A CONTRACTILE ORGAN : A STUDY OF STRUCTURE AND FUNCTION

    Get PDF
    Contracting granulation tissues contain fibroblasts that develop characteristics typical of smooth muscle: (a) They contain an extensive cytoplasmic fibrillar system. (b) They show immunofluorescent labeling of their cytoplasm with human anti-smooth muscle serum. (c) The nuclei show complicated folds and indentations, indicative of cellular contraction. (d) There are cell-to-cell and cell-to-stroma attachments. (e) It is possible to extract similar quantities of actomyosin (having the same adenosine triphosphatase activity) from granulation tissue and from pregnant rat uterus. (f) Strips of granulation tissue, when tested pharmacologically in vitro, behave similarly to smooth muscle. All these data support the view that, under certain conditions, fibroblasts can differentiate into a cell type structurally and functionally similar to smooth muscle and that this cell, the "myo-fibroblast," plays an important role in connective tissue contraction

    Contraction of granulation tissue in vitro: similarity to smooth muscle

    No full text
    Strips of granulation tissue from three different experimental models contract in vitro when treated with substances that induce contraction of smooth muscle. Because the fibroblasts in such tissues have some ultrastructural features typical of smooth muscle, our findings indicate that fibroblasts are able to modulate toward a cell type that is morphologically and functionally close to smooth muscle

    GRANULATION TISSUE AS A CONTRACTILE ORGAN

    No full text
    corecore