Antifibrotic action of Cu/Zn SOD is mediated by TGF-β1 repression and phenotypic reversion of myofibroblasts

2001 
Abstract Skin fibrosis is characterized by the proliferation and accumulation of activated fibroblasts called myofibroblasts. They exhibit specific cytoskeletal differentiation, overexpress the fibrogenic cytokine TGF-β1, synthesize excess extracellular matrix compounds and exhibit a depleted antioxidant metabolism. Recently, SOD was successfully used as an antifibrotic agent in vivo, thus challenging the postulate of established fibrosis irreversibility. We postulated that myofibroblasts could be a direct target for this therapeutic effect. To test this hypothesis, we used three-dimensional co-culture models of skin, in which specific phenotypes of normal fibroblasts versus myofibroblasts are retained. These 3-D models were treated with liposomal and carrier-free Cu/Zn SOD, and examined for their effects on cell number, cell death, and phenotypic differentiation. The results show that SOD did not induce myofibroblast cell death, whereas it significantly reduced TGF-β1 expression, thus demonstrating that SOD might be proposed as a potent antagonist of this major fibrogenic growth factor. We also found that SOD significantly lowered the levels of the myofibroblast marker α-sm actin, of β-actin, and of the extracellular matrix components α1(I) collagen and tenascin-C. In conclusion, our results suggest that SOD antifibrotic action occurred in vitro through the reversion of myofibroblasts into normal fibroblasts.
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