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Journal ArticleDOI

Fibrinogen signal transduction as a mediator and therapeutic target in inflammation: lessons from multiple sclerosis.

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TLDR
The present article focuses on the recent discoveries of specific cellular targets and receptors for fibrinogen within tissues that have extended the role of fibr inogen from a coagulation factor to a regulator of inflammation and immunity.
Abstract
The blood protein fibrinogen as a ligand for integrin and non-integrin receptors functions as the molecular nexus of coagulation, inflammation and immunity. Studies in animal models and in human disease have demonstrated that extravascular fibrinogen that is deposited in tissues upon vascular rupture is not merely a marker, but a mediator of diseases with an inflammatory component, such as rheumatoid arthritis, multiple sclerosis, sepsis, myocardial infarction and bacterial infection. The present article focuses on the recent discoveries of specific cellular targets and receptors for fibrinogen within tissues that have extended the role of fibrinogen from a coagulation factor to a regulator of inflammation and immunity. Fibrinogen has the potential for selective drug targeting that would target its proinflammatory properties without affecting its beneficial effects in hemostasis, since it interacts with different receptors to mediate blood coagulation and inflammation. Strategies to target receptors for fibrinogen and fibrin within the tissue microenvironment could reveal selective and disease-specific agents for therapeutic intervention in a variety of human diseases associated with fibrin deposition.

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Journal ArticleDOI

DAMPening Inflammation by Modulating TLR Signalling

TL;DR: The current knowledge about distinct signalling cascades resulting from self TLR activation is explored and the involvement of endogenous TLR activators in disease is discussed to highlight how specifically targeting DAMPs may yield therapies that do not globally suppress the immune system.
Journal Article

Dampening inflammation by modulating tlr signalling

Kim S. Midwood
- 01 Jan 2011 - 
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors explore the current knowledge about distinct signalling cascades resulting from self TLR activation and highlight the involvement of endogenous TLR activators in disease and highlight how specifically targeting DAMPs may yield therapies that do not globally suppress the immune system.
Journal ArticleDOI

Fibrinogen as a key regulator of inflammation in disease

TL;DR: The role of fibrinogen in inflammatory disease is focused on highlighting its unique structural properties, cellular targets, and signal transduction pathways that make it a potent proinflammatory mediator and a potential therapeutic target.
Journal ArticleDOI

Integrin CD11b negatively regulates TLR-triggered inflammatory responses by activating Syk and promoting degradation of MyD88 and TRIF via Cbl-b

TL;DR: CD11b deficiency enhanced TLR-mediated responses in macrophages, rendering mice more susceptible to endotoxin shock and Escherichia coli–caused sepsis, and inhibits TLR signaling in innate immune responses.
Journal ArticleDOI

Fibrinogen Triggers Astrocyte Scar Formation by Promoting the Availability of Active TGF-β after Vascular Damage

TL;DR: Results identify fibrinogen as a primary astrocyte activation signal, provide evidence that deposition of inhibitory proteoglycans is induced by a blood protein that leaks in the CNS after vasculature rupture, and point to TGF-β as a molecular link between vascular permeability and scar formation.
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