May 30, 2012 in
Medical research Researchers at the
University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine have identified an agent that in
lab tests protected the skin and lungs from fibrosis, a process that can
ultimately end in organ failure and even death because the damaged tissue
becomes scarred and can no longer function properly. The findings were
published today in Science Translational Medicine. Biology Research Reagents - 2000+
Proteins,Antibody, Kits,cDNA, Bulks & Vials, Quality Guaranteed -
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effective therapies for life-threatening illnesses such as idiopathic pulmonary
fibrosis and systemic sclerosis, which cause progressive organ scarring and
failure, said senior author Carol A. Feghali-Bostwick, Ph.D., associate
professor, Division of Pulmonary, Allergy and Critical Care Medicine, and co-Director
of the Scleroderma
Center , Pitt School of
Medicine. "It's estimated that tissue fibrosis
contributes to 45 percent of all deaths in developed countries because organ
failure is the final common pathway for numerous diseases," she said.
"Identifying a way to stop this process from happening could have enormous
impact on mortality and quality of life." The
research team evaluated E4, a piece of protein or peptide derived from
endostatin, a component of collagen known for its inhibition of new blood
vessel growth. In lab tests, healthy human skin cells that were treated to
become fibrotic remained normal when E4 was present. The skin and lungs of mice
were protected from cell death and tissue scarring by a single injection of E4
administered five or eight days after they were given the cancer drug
bleomycin, which is known to induce fibrosis. The peptide also could reverse
scarring that had already occurred, the researchers found. In a
unique approach, the investigators also tested E4
in human skin maintained in the laboratory to confirm it would
be effective in treating fibrosis in a human tissue. E4 blocked new and ongoing
fibrosis in human skin. The agent might work by stalling the
cross-linking of collagen needed to form thick scars, Dr. Feghali-Bostwick
said. While the body naturally produces endostatin, it appears that it cannot
make sufficient amounts to counteract fibrosis development in some diseases. "This
endostatin peptide passes two important hurdles that suggest it is a promising
candidate drug for development for patients with idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis
and systemic sclerosis" said Mark T. Gladwin, M.D., chief, Division of
Pulmonary, Allergy and Critical Care Medicine at UPMC and Pitt. "It
reverses established disease in animal models and it reverses fibrosis in the
human skin fibrosis model." In a case of serendipity, the researchers
discovered E4 while exploring the process of fibrosis. Post-doctoral fellow and
study co-author Yukie Yamaguchi, M.D., Ph.D., was conducting some experiments
with proteins thought to facilitate the scarring process. "Dr.
Yamaguchi showed me the tests that showed endostatin wasn't working to increase
fibrosis, but in fact shut it down," Dr. Feghali-Bostwick said. "It
was the opposite of what we expected and I was very excited about our finding.
As Louis Pasteur once said, 'chance favors the prepared mind.'"
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