| Literature DB >> 27790036 |
Abstract
Without doubt, animal models have provided significant insights into our understanding of the rheumatological diseases; however, no model has accurately replicated all aspects of any autoimmune disease. Recent years have seen a plethora of knockouts and transgenics that have contributed to our knowledge of the initiating events of systemic sclerosis, an autoimmune disease. In this review, the focus is on models of systemic sclerosis and how they have progressed our understanding of fibrosis and vasculopathy, and whether they are relevant to the pathogenesis of systemic sclerosis.Entities:
Keywords: animal models; chicken; fibrosis; mouse; systemic sclerosis; vasculopathy
Year: 2014 PMID: 27790036 PMCID: PMC5045111 DOI: 10.2147/OARRR.S50009
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Open Access Rheumatol ISSN: 1179-156X
Prominent features of animal models of systemic sclerosis
| Fibrotic site | Vasculopathy | Inflammation | Autoantibody target | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tsk1/+ mouse | Dermis | Cardiomyopathy and abnormal vascular tone | Absent | Fibrillin-1 |
| Tsk2/+ mouse | Dermis | Absent | Modest inflammation | ANA, DNA topoisomerase I/Scl70 |
| UCD-200 chicken | Skin and organs | Vascular occlusion | Perivascular infiltrate | ssDNA, histones, dsDNA |
| Bleomycin model | Skin and lung | Present | Peaks between days 3 and 5, then declines | Gastric mucosa |
| Hypochlorous model | Skin and lung | Vasculopathy of small renal arteries | Present in the dermis | Higher but not significant levels of DNA topoisomerase I/Scl70 |
| Sclerodermatous GVHD | Skin | Present | Inflammation and cytokine perturbations | DNA topoisomerase I/Scl70 |
| Angiotensin II model | Present | Present, also has cardiovascular remodeling | Perivascular inflammation | Not reported |
| DNA topoisomerase I and CFA | Skin and lung | Not reported | Cytokine perturbations and inflammation peaks at 8 weeks | DNA topoisomerase I/Scl70 |
| Endothelin-1 | Kidney and lung | Reduced | Present | Not reported |
| FRA-2 | Skin and lung | Present | Present | Not reported |
| Type I TGF-β receptor | Dermis | Present | Absent | Not reported |
| Kinase-deficient type II TGF-β receptor | Dermis and lung | Absent but addition of a VEGFR inhibitor promoted vasculopathy | Not reported | Not reported |
| PDGFR-α | Skin and organs | Not reported | Cytokine perturbations | DNA topoisomerase I/Scl70 |
| Caveolin-1 | Dermis | Present | Increased inflammatory responses | Not reported |
| Egr-1 | Reduced fibrosis | Not reported | Reduced inflammation | Not reported |
| Fli1 | Skin | Present | Not reported | Not reported |
| MCP-1 | Reduced fibrosis | Not reported | Reduced inflammation | Not reported |
| mPGES-1 | Reduced fibrosis | Not reported | Reduced inflammation | Not reported |
| PPARγ | Dermis | Not reported | Increased inflammation | Not reported |
| PTEN | Dermis | Not reported | Not reported | Not reported |
| Relaxin | Skin | Not reported | Not reported | Not reported |
Abbreviations: ANA, antinuclear antibody; CFA, Freund’s complete adjuvant; MCP-1, macrophage chemoattractant protein-1; PPARγ, peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor-gamma; PTEN, phosphatase and tensin homolog; FRA-2, Fos-related antigen-2; Egr-1, early growth response gene; Fli1, Friend leukemia integration factor-1; TGF-β, transforming growth factor-beta; PDGFR, platelet-derived growth factor receptor; ssDNA, single-stranded DNA; dsDNA, double-stranded DNA; VEGFR, vascular endothelial growth factor receptor; GVHD, graft versus host disease; Tsk1/+, tight skin 1; Tsk2/+, tight skin 2; UCD-200, University of California at Davis line 200; mPGES-1, microsomal prostaglandin E2 synthase-1.
Preclinical testing of drugs in mice and their outcome in systemic sclerosis
| Drug | Mode of action | Efficacy in mice | Efficacy in SSc |
|---|---|---|---|
| Anakinra | IL-1 receptor antagonist | Effectively blocked pulmonary fibrosis in the bleomycin model | Currently undergoing clinical trial, but no data are available |
| Bosentan | Endothelin-1 receptor antagonist | Tested in the Tsk1/+ mouse and shown to effectively reduce moderate vasculopathy | Drug well tolerated and the data suggest that bosentan may be effective at stabilizing or improving the microcirculation in SSc |
| Colchicine | Inhibits mitosis | This drug demonstrated moderate protection against pulmonary fibrosis | One study reported clinical improvement |
| Cyclophosphamide | Nitrogen mustard alkylating agent | Use of bleomycin and cyclophosphamide as chemotherapeutic drugs is associated with side effects including toxicity to the respiratory system | One year of oral cyclophosphamide in patients with symptomatic scleroderma-related interstitial lung disease had a significant but modest beneficial effect on lung function, dyspnea, thickening of the skin, and health-related quality of life |
| Cyclosporin A | Immunosuppressant | Studies show efficacy at ameliorating bleomycin induced lung fibrosis | Limited studies in SSc patients; however, patients on cyclosporine appear to do well |
| Etanercept | TNF inhibitor | Effective at reducing bleomycin-induced dermal fibrosis | Shown to be useful at treating inflammatory joint diseases in SSc |
| Halofuginone | Inhibits collagen synthesis and Th17 differentiation | Effectively reduced fibrosis in Tsk1/+ mice, and mice with chronic GVHD | Five of 12 SSc patients demonstrated efficacy in a small pilot study |
| Imatinib | Tyrosine kinase inhibitor | Reduced dermal and hypodermal thickening in the Tsk1/+ mouse and reduced overt fibrosis in the bleomycin mouse model | Frequent adverse events with poor tolerability |
| Iloprost | Prostacyclin agonist | Iloprost has a protective effect on bleomycin-induced pulmonary fibrosis | Heterogeneous results of small trials make the efficacy of iloprost hard to assess |
| Losartan | Angiotensin II receptor antagonist | Losartan had an inhibitory effect on bleomycin-induced pulmonary fibrosis | Short-term study demonstrated efficacy for treating Raynaud’s phenomenon; however, no studies have been published to suggest it might be effective against fibrosis |
| Methotrexate | Inhibits folic acid metabolism | No efficacy against bleomycin | A recent study suggested that methotrexate did not significantly alter the skin score |
| Minocycline | Antibiotic | Not tested | Failed open-label trial |
| Mycophenolate mofetil | Immunosuppressant | Mycophenolate mofetil was able to prevent the development of bleomycin-induced dermal fibrosis | In a small study, mycophenolate mofetil demonstrated efficacy |
| Pirfenidone | Antifibrotic/anti-inflammatory | Pirfenidone effectively prevented bleomycin-induced | The clinical trial is currently recruiting and may be useful to treat lung fibrosis |
| Prednisone | Immunosuppressant | Not tested | Promotes renal complications in SSc patients |
| Relaxin | Modulation of systemic and vascular tone | Relaxin abrogated bleomycin-induced lung fibrosis | Initial studies demonstrated efficacy in SSc; |
| Rilonacept | A fusion protein between IL-1 receptor and IL-1 accessory protein | Not tested | Currently recruiting SSc patients and no data are available for this drug (NCT01538719) |
| Rituximab | Targets B-cells | Not tested | A moderately large cohort showed reduced fibrosis and inhibition of worsening of disease when treated with rituximab |
| Terguride | Serotonin inhibitor | Terguride effectively reduced skin fibrosis in the bleomycin model | An ongoing clinical trial since 2010 in Europe, but no data have been published to date |
| Thalidomide | Not completely known, but thought to be an IL-6 inhibitor or a Th1/Th2 modulator | Thalidomide successfully reduced pulmonary fibrosis | Clinical trial for thalidomide was terminated due to difficulty in recruiting subjects A pomalidomide study is currently underway (NCT01559129) |
Abbreviations: IL, interleukin; SSc, systemic sclerosis; Tsk1/+, tight skin 1; GVHD, graft versus host disease; TNF, tumor necrosis factor; Th, T helper.