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Publication : A ribosomal S-6 kinase-mediated signal to C/EBP-beta is critical for the development of liver fibrosis.

First Author  Buck M Year  2007
Journal  PLoS One Volume  2
Issue  12 Pages  e1372
PubMed ID  18159255 Mgi Jnum  J:131072
Mgi Id  MGI:3772765 Doi  10.1371/journal.pone.0001372
Citation  Buck M, et al. (2007) A Ribosomal S-6 Kinase-Mediated Signal to C/EBP-beta Is Critical for the Development of Liver Fibrosis. PLoS One 2(12):e1372
abstractText  BACKGROUND: In response to liver injury, hepatic stellate cell (HSC) activation causes excessive liver fibrosis. Here we show that activation of RSK and phosphorylation of C/EBPbeta on Thr217 in activated HSC is critical for the progression of liver fibrosis. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: Chronic treatment with the hepatotoxin CCl(4) induced severe liver fibrosis in C/EBPbeta(+/+) mice but not in mice expressing C/EBPbeta-Ala217, a non-phosphorylatable RSK-inhibitory transgene. C/EBPbeta-Ala217 was present within the death receptor complex II, with active caspase 8, and induced apoptosis of activated HSC. The C/EBPbeta-Ala217 peptides directly stimulated caspase 8 activation in a cell-free system. C/EBPbeta(+/+) mice with CCl(4)-induced severe liver fibrosis, while continuing on CCl(4), were treated with a cell permeant RSK-inhibitory peptide for 4 or 8 weeks. The peptide inhibited RSK activation, stimulating apoptosis of HSC, preventing progression and inducing regression of liver fibrosis. We found a similar activation of RSK and phosphorylation of human C/EBPbeta on Thr266 (human phosphoacceptor) in activated HSC in patients with severe liver fibrosis but not in normal livers, suggesting that this pathway may also be relevant in human liver fibrosis. CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: These data indicate that the RSK-C/EBPbeta phosphorylation pathway is critical for the development of liver fibrosis and suggest a potential therapeutic target.
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