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Localization of Fibronectin in Gingival Connective Tissue of the Beagle Dog
12
Citations
29
References
1986
Year
Tissue EngineeringCollagen FibrilsCell AdhesionPathologyCytoskeletonCellular PhysiologyMatrix BiologyConnective Tissue DiseaseIndividual Collagen FibrilsFibrosisHistopathologyAmorphous PatchesFibrinolysisVascular BiologyBeagle DogCell BiologyGingival Connective TissueVeterinary ScienceOral BiologyCell-matrix InteractionWound HealingClinical PathologyMedicineWound ManagementExtracellular Matrix
Ferritin and peroxidase-conjugated antibodies were used in an indirect antibody method to localize fibronectin in gingival connective tissues. Fibronectin was found in the basal lamina beneath the epithelium and endothelium. Collagen fibrils associated with the basement membranes were also heavily coated by fibronectin. Amorphous patches of fibronectin were found adjacent to the plasma membrane of epithelial cells as well as free in the interepithelial spaces. Fibronectin was present throughout the connective tissue in close association with individual collagen fibrils, apparently serving as an interfibrillar cementing substance. Patches of fibronectin were located at the cell surface of fibroblasts, plasma cells, lymphocytes, endothelial cells, smooth muscle cells, and neutrophils. These amorphous patches were observed to connect adjacent cells across narrow spaces and to connect cells to collagen fibrils. The heavy labeling for fibronectin visualized by fluorescent microscopy around gingival blood vessels (Cho et al., 1985) can be accounted for by a heavy coating of fibronectin on the collagen fibrils and basal laminas associated with endothelial cells, as well as by the presence of abundant deposits of fibronectin along the cell membranes of endothelial cells and in the intercellular spaces of the vessel wall.
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