Elevated synthesis of fibronectin in the calvaria of patients with Apert syndrome and increased fibronectin gene expression in port wine-derived fibroblasts of patients with Sturge-Weber disease have also been reported.
The phenotype of cultured fibroblasts from patients affected by Apert's syndrome, a rare connective disorder, differs from that of normal cells in its extracellular matrix macromolecule composition (glycosaminoglycans, collagens and fibronectin) and is further modulated by treatment with interleukins (ILs).