AI Article Synopsis

  • Neuronal protein 3.1 (P311) is the first protein identified to boost the translation of transforming growth factor (TGF)-β1 to -β3, which is crucial for scar formation, both in laboratory settings and live specimens.
  • P311 levels increase in response to skin wounds and scarring; when P311 is genetically removed, collagen production in scars significantly drops, leading to softer and weaker scars.
  • In laboratory tests, P311 enhances TGF-β levels and collagen production in skin cells, demonstrating that it plays a vital role in creating normal skin scars and linking it to potential risks in surgical recovery if P311 levels are low.

Article Abstract

Neuronal protein 3.1 (P311), a conserved RNA-binding protein, represents the first documented protein known to stimulate transforming growth factor (TGF)-β1 to -β3 translation in vitro and in vivo. Because TGF-βs play critical roles in fibrogenesis, we initiated efforts to define the role of P311 in skin scar formation. Here, we show that P311 is up-regulated in skin wounds and in normal and hypertrophic scars. Genetic ablation of p311 resulted in a significant decrease in skin scar collagen deposition. Lentiviral transfer of P311 corrected the deficits, whereas down-regulation of P311 levels by lentiviral RNA interference reproduced the deficits seen in P311 mice. The decrease in collagen deposition resulted in scars with reduced stiffness but also reduced scar tensile strength. In vitro studies using murine and human dermal fibroblasts showed that P311 stimulated TGF-β1 to -β3 translation, a process that involved eukaryotic translation initiation factor 3 subunit b as a P311 binding partner. This resulted in increased TGF-β levels/activity and increased collagen production. In addition, P311 induced dermal fibroblast activation and proliferation. Finally, exogenous TGF-β1 to -β3, each restituted the normal scar phenotype. These studies demonstrate that P311 is required for the production of normal cutaneous scars and place P311 immediately up-stream of TGF-βs in the process of fibrogenesis. Conditions that decrease P311 levels could result in less tensile scars, which could potentially lead to higher incidence of dehiscence after surgery.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5389364PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ajpath.2016.10.004DOI Listing

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