| Literature DB >> 30806766 |
Jakub Żółkiewicz1, Anna Stochmal1, Lidia Rudnicka2.
Abstract
Systemic sclerosis is a multiorgan autoimmune disease characterized by vasculopathy and tissue fibrosis of unknown etiology. Recently, adipokines (cell signaling proteins secreted by adipose tissue) have attracted much attention as a cytokine family contributing to the various pathological processes of systemic sclerosis. Adipokines, such as leptin, adiponectin, resistin, adipsin, visfatin or chemerin are a heterogenic group of molecules. Adiponectin exhibits anti-fibrotic features and affects inflammatory reactions. Leptin promotes fibrosis and inflammation. Resistin was linked to vascular involvement in systemic sclerosis. Visfatin was associated with regression of skin lesions in late-stage systemic sclerosis. Chemerin appears as a marker of increased risk of impaired renal function and development of skin sclerosis in the early stage of systemic sclerosis. Vaspin was indicated to have a protective role in digital ulcers development. Novel adipokines-adipsin, apelin, omentin and CTRP-3-are emerging as molecules potentially involved in SSc pathogenesis. Serum adipokine levels may be used as predictive and diagnostic factors in systemic sclerosis. However, further investigations are required to establish firm correlations between distinct adipokines and systemic sclerosis.Entities:
Keywords: Adipokines; Adiponectin; Adipsin; Apelin; CTRP-3; Chemerin; Leptin; Omentin; Pathogenesis; Resistin; Systemic sclerosis; Vaspin; Visfatin
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30806766 PMCID: PMC6469644 DOI: 10.1007/s00403-019-01893-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Arch Dermatol Res ISSN: 0340-3696 Impact factor: 3.017
Fig. 1The role of adipokines in the active phase of systemic sclerosis and their effect on immune cells, fibroblasts and blood vessels. The main source of adipokines is the adipose tissue. Adipokines have a pleiotropic effect on cells involved in the pathogenesis of systemic sclerosis. Elevated serum level of resistin and chemerin as well as a decreased level of vaspin result in vasoconstriction and oxidative stress in the endothelial cells. Increased concentration of chemerin and decreased levels of adiponectin and visfatin stimulate proliferation of fibroblasts and excessive synthesis of extracellular matrix proteins. Activation of lymphocytes and the production of pro-fibrotic cytokines are augmented as a result of decreased concentration of adiponectin, leptin and visfatin and increased concentration of resistin
Potential role of adipokines in systemic sclerosis
| Adipokine | Level in SSc comparing to controls | Source of sample | Correlation with complications |
|---|---|---|---|
| Adiponectin | Decreased—only in the early stage of SSc [ | Serum level, | Negative correlation with Valentini activity score [ |
| Leptin | Decreased (active vs. inactive SSc) [ | Serum level | ↑ Pulmonary fibrosis [ |
| Increased (dominating) [ | Serum level | ||
| Resistin | Increased (no statistical significance) [ | Serum level | ↑ Pulmonary arterial hypertension [ |
| Visfatin | Increased in late stage dcSSc [ | Serum level | Positive correlation with regression of skin lesions [ |
| Chemerin | Increased [ | Lesional psoriatic vs. uninvolved skin | Positive correlation with disease duration [ |
| Increased [ | Dermal blood vessels | ||
| Decreased [ | Dermal fibroblasts | ||
| Vaspin | Decreased [ | Serum level | Biomarker of digital ulcers in SSc [ |
| Adipsin | Increased [ | Serum level | Positive correlation with frequency of anti-centromere antibodies [ |
| Apelin | Decreased [ | Fibroblasts | Negative correlation with mRSS [ |
| No difference [ | Serum level | ||
| Omentin | No difference [ | Serum level | Positive correlation with disease duration in dcSSc [ |
| Decreased in dcSSc vs. lcSSc [ | Serum level | ||
| CTRP-3 | Not studied in SSc yet | – | – |
Potential mechanism of adipokines’ action in SSc pathogenesis and their role in inflammation
| Adipokine | (Potential) Mechanism of action | Role in inflammation |
|---|---|---|
| Adiponectin | HMW and globular APN : ↑ TNF-α, IL-8, IL-6 [ | Anti-inflammatory (dominating) [ |
| Leptin | ↑ IL-6, IL-8, TNF-α [ | Pro-inflammatory [ |
| Resistin | ↑ IL-6, IL-8 secretion [ | Pro-inflammatory [ |
| Visfatin | ↑ IL-4, IL-10, IL-1Ra circulating levels [ | Anti-inflammatory (dominating) [ |
| ↑ Development T- and B-cell lymphocyte [ | Pro-inflammatory [ | |
| Chemerin | M1 macrophage polarization [ | Pro-inflammatory [ |
| Vaspin | ↓ TNF-α, IL-1, IL-6, ICAM-1, VCAM-1, MCP-1 [ | Anti-inflammatory [ |
| Adipsin | Mediated via complement pathway activation [ | Pro-inflammatory [ |
| Apelin | ↓ TGF-β-induced skin fibrosis [ | Pro-inflammatory [ |
| Omentin | M2 macrophage polarization [ | Anti-inflammatory [ |
| CTRP-3 | ↓ TLRs pro-inflammatory effects [ | Anti-inflammatory [ |