Publication | Open Access
Tumor Necrosis Factor α Suppresses the Induction of Connective Tissue Growth Factor by Transforming Growth Factor-β in Normal and Scleroderma Fibroblasts
248
Citations
33
References
2000
Year
CTGF is overexpressed in fibrotic disorders and is regulated by TGF‑β through a promoter response element, while TNF‑α is a macrophage‑derived cytokine involved in inflammation and wound‑healing gene induction. The study examined whether TNF‑α can modulate CTGF gene expression. TNF‑α suppresses TGF‑β‑induced CTGF and collagen synthesis in normal fibroblasts via NF‑κB‑dependent mechanisms, but scleroderma fibroblasts exhibit constitutive CTGF expression that is resistant to TNF‑α, suggesting that impaired negative regulation may drive excessive scarring.
Connective tissue growth factor (CTGF) is overexpressed in a variety of fibrotic disorders, presumably secondary to the activation and production of transforming growth factor-β (TGF-β), a key inducer of fibroblast proliferation and matrix synthesis. The CTGF gene promoter has a TGF-β response element that regulates its expression in fibroblasts but not epithelial cells or lymphocytes. Recent studies have shown that the macrophage-produced cytokine tumor necrosis factor α (TNFα) is necessary to promote inflammation and to induce genes, such as matrix metalloproteinases, involved with the early stages of wound healing. In this study, we examined the ability of TNFα to modulate CTGF gene expression. TNFα was found to suppress the TGF-β-induced expression of CTGF protein in cultured normal fibroblasts. The activity of TNFα was blocked by NF-κB inhibitors. We showed that sequences between −244 and −166 of the CTGF promoter were necessary for both TGF-β and TNFα to modulate CTGF expression. There was a constitutive expression of CTGF by scleroderma fibroblasts that was increased by TGF-β treatment. Although TNFα was able to repress TGF-β-induced CTGF and collagen synthesis both in normal and scleroderma skin fibroblasts, fibroblasts cultured from scleroderma patients were more resistant to TNFα as TNFα was unable to suppress the basal level of CTGF expression in scleroderma fibroblasts. Thus, we suspect that the high level of constitutive CTGF expression in scleroderma fibroblasts and its inability to respond to negative regulatory cytokines may contribute to the excessive scarring of skin and internal organs in patients with scleroderma.
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