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Publication : Fibronectin protects from excessive liver fibrosis by modulating the availability of and responsiveness of stellate cells to active TGF-β.

First Author  Kawelke N Year  2011
Journal  PLoS One Volume  6
Issue  11 Pages  e28181
PubMed ID  22140539 Mgi Jnum  J:181129
Mgi Id  MGI:5308852 Doi  10.1371/journal.pone.0028181
Citation  Kawelke N, et al. (2011) Fibronectin protects from excessive liver fibrosis by modulating the availability of and responsiveness of stellate cells to active TGF-beta. PLoS One 6(11):e28181
abstractText  Fibrotic tissue in the liver is mainly composed of collagen. Fibronectin, which is also present in fibrotic matrices, is required for collagen matrix assembly in vitro. It also modulates the amount of growth factors and their release from the matrix. We therefore examined the effects of the absence of fibronectin on the development of fibrosis in mice.Conditional deletion of fibronectin in the liver using the Mx promoter to drive cre expression resulted in increased collagen production and hence a more pronounced fibrosis in response to dimethylnitrosamine in mice. Exclusive deletion of fibronectin in hepatocytes or normalization of circulating fibronectin in Mx-cKO mice did not affect the development of fibrosis suggesting a role for fibronectin production by other liver cell types. The boosted fibrosis in fibronectin-deficient mice was associated with enhanced stellate cell activation and proliferation, elevated concentrations of active TGF-beta, and increased TGF-beta-mediated signaling.In vitro experiments revealed that collagen-type-I production by fibronectin-deficient hepatic stellate cells stimulated with TGF-beta was more pronounced, and was associated with augmented Smad3-mediated signaling. Interfering with TGF-beta signaling using SB431542 normalized collagen-type-I production in fibronectin-deficient hepatic stellate cells. Furthermore, precoating culture plates with fibronectin, but not collagen, or providing fibronectin fibrils unable to interact with RGD binding integrins via the RGD domain significantly diminished the amount of active TGF-beta in fibronectin-deficient stellate cells and normalized collagen-type-I production in response to TGF-beta stimulation. Thus, excessive stellate cell activation and production of collagen results from increased active TGF-beta and TGF-beta signaling in the absence of fibronectin.In conclusion, our data indicate that fibronectin controls the availability of active TGF-beta in the injured liver, which impacts the severity of the resulting fibrosis. We therefore propose a novel role for locally produced fibronectin in protecting the liver from an excessive TGF-beta-mediated response.
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