Department of Biotechnology
inStem (Institute for Stem Cell Science and Regenerative Medicine)

Mindin (SPON2) Is Essential for Cutaneous Fibrogenesis in a Mouse Model of Systemic Sclerosis.

Publication Type

Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

Date of Publication

May 1, 2023

Journal

The Journal of investigative dermatology

Volume/Issue

143/5

ISSN

1523-1747

Systemic sclerosis is a fibrotic disease that initiates in the skin and progresses to internal organs, leading to a poor prognosis. Unraveling the etiology of a chronic, multifactorial disease such as systemic sclerosis has been aided by various animal models that recapitulate certain aspects of the human pathology. We found that the transcription factor SNAI1 is overexpressed in the epidermis of patients with systemic sclerosis, and a transgenic mouse recapitulating this expression pattern is sufficient to induce many clinical features of the human disease. Using this mouse model as a discovery platform, we have uncovered a critical role for the matricellular protein Mindin (SPON2) in fibrogenesis. Mindin is produced by SNAI1 transgenic skin keratinocytes and aids fibrogenesis by inducing early inflammatory cytokine production and collagen secretion in resident dermal fibroblasts. Given the dispensability of Mindin in normal tissue physiology, targeting this protein holds promise as an effective therapy for fibrosis.

Alternate Journal

J Invest Dermatol

PubMed ID

36528128

Authors

Isha Rana
Sunny Kataria
Tuan Lin Tan
Edries Yousaf Hajam
Deepak Kumar Kashyap
Dyuti Saha
Johan Ajnabi
Sayan Paul
Shashank Jayappa
Akhil S H P Ananthan
Pankaj Kumar
Rania F Zaarour
J Haarshaadri
Gaurav Kansagara
Abrar Rizvi
Ravindra K Zirmire
Krithika Badarinath
Sneha Uday Khedkar
Yogesh Chandra
Rekha Samuel
Renu George
Debashish Danda
Paul Mazhuvanchary Jacob
Rakesh Dey
Perundurai S Dhandapany
You-Wen He
John Varga
Shyni Varghese
Colin Jamora

Keywords

Mice, Transgenic
Skin
Extracellular Matrix Proteins
Animals
Neoplasm Proteins
Mice
Scleroderma, Systemic
Humans
Disease Models, Animal
Fibroblasts
Fibrosis