Nature Communications (Aug 2020)

Elucidating the fundamental fibrotic processes driving abdominal adhesion formation

  • Deshka S. Foster,
  • Clement D. Marshall,
  • Gunsagar S. Gulati,
  • Malini S. Chinta,
  • Alan Nguyen,
  • Ankit Salhotra,
  • R. Ellen Jones,
  • Austin Burcham,
  • Tristan Lerbs,
  • Lu Cui,
  • Megan E. King,
  • Ashley L. Titan,
  • R. Chase Ransom,
  • Anoop Manjunath,
  • Michael S. Hu,
  • Charles P. Blackshear,
  • Shamik Mascharak,
  • Alessandra L. Moore,
  • Jeffrey A. Norton,
  • Cindy J. Kin,
  • Andrew A. Shelton,
  • Michael Januszyk,
  • Geoffrey C. Gurtner,
  • Gerlinde Wernig,
  • Michael T. Longaker

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-020-17883-1
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 1
pp. 1 – 18

Abstract

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Abdominal adhesions are a common cause of bowel obstruction, but knowledge regarding adhesion biology and anti-adhesion therapies remains limited. Here the authors report a systematic analysis of mouse and human adhesion tissues demonstrating that visceral fibroblast JUN and associated PDGFRA expression promote adhesions, and JUN suppression can prevent adhesion formation.