Integrins in wound healing, fibrosis and tumor stroma: High potential targets for therapeutics and drug delivery

Publication date

2018-04

Authors

Schnittert, Jonas
Bansal, Ruchi
Storm, GerritISNI 0000000042534976
Prakash, Jai

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Document Type

Article
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Abstract

Wound healing is a complex process, which ultimately leads to fibrosis if not repaired well. Pathologically very similar to fibrosis is the tumor stroma, found in several solid tumors which are regarded as wounds that do not heal. Integrins are heterodimeric surface receptors which control various physiological cellular functions. Additionally, integrins also sense ECM-induced extracellular changes during pathological events, leading to cellular responses, which influence ECM remodeling. The purpose and scope of this review is to introduce integrins as key targets for therapeutics and drug delivery within the scope of wound healing, fibrosis and the tumor stroma. This review provides a general introduction to the biology of integrins including their types, ligands, means of signaling and interaction with growth factor receptors. Furthermore, we highlight integrins as key targets for therapeutics and drug delivery, based on their biological role, expression pattern within human tissues and at cellular level. Next, therapeutic approaches targeting integrins, with a focus on clinical studies, and targeted drug delivery strategies based on ligands are described.

Keywords

SDG 3 - Good Health and Well-being

Citation

Schnittert, J, Bansal, R, Storm, G & Prakash, J 2018, 'Integrins in wound healing, fibrosis and tumor stroma : High potential targets for therapeutics and drug delivery', Advanced Drug Delivery Reviews, vol. 129, pp. 37-53. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.addr.2018.01.020