| Literature DB >> 35382388 |
Rebecca Lee1, Nicoletta Del Papa2, Martin Introna3, Charles F Reese1, Marina Zemskova1, Michael Bonner1, Gustavo Carmen-Lopez1, Kristi Helke4, Stanley Hoffman1,5, Elena Tourkina1,5.
Abstract
The potential value of mesenchymal stromal/stem cell therapy in treating skin fibrosis in scleroderma (systemic sclerosis) and of the caveolin-1 scaffolding domain peptide in treating lung, skin, and heart fibrosis is known. To understand how these observations may relate to differences between mesenchymal stromal/stem cells from healthy subjects and subjects with fibrosis, we have characterized the fibrogenic and adipogenic potential of adipose-derived mesenchymal stromal/stem cells from systemic sclerosis patients, from mice with fibrotic lung and skin disease induced by systemic bleomycin treatment, and from healthy controls. Early passage systemic sclerosis adipose-derived mesenchymal stromal/stem cells have a profibrotic/anti-adipogenic phenotype compared to healthy adipose-derived mesenchymal stromal/stem cells (low caveolin-1, high α-smooth muscle actin, high HSP47, low pAKT, low capacity for adipogenic differentiation). This phenotype is mimicked by treating healthy adipose-derived mesenchymal stromal/stem cells with transforming growth factor beta or caveolin-1 small interfering RNA and is reversed in systemic sclerosis adipose-derived mesenchymal stromal/stem cells by treatment with caveolin-1 scaffolding domain peptide, but not scrambled caveolin-1 scaffolding domain peptide. Similar results were obtained with adipose-derived mesenchymal stromal/stem cells from systemic sclerosis patients and from bleomycin-treated mice, indicating the central role of caveolin-1 in mesenchymal stromal/stem cell differentiation in fibrotic disease.Entities:
Keywords: Caveolin-1; adipogenesis; fibrosis; mesenchymal stem cells; scleroderma
Year: 2019 PMID: 35382388 PMCID: PMC8922642 DOI: 10.1177/2397198318821510
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Scleroderma Relat Disord ISSN: 2397-1983