AI Article Synopsis

  • Liver fibrosis is a process where excess proteins build up in the liver, leading to serious health issues.
  • Researchers found that BMP1-3, a protein circulating in the blood, can influence kidney disease progression and may also play a role in liver disease.
  • In experiments with rats, blocking BMP1-3 reduced collagen production and modified the expression of important genes, suggesting that targeting BMP1-3 could help slow down liver fibrosis and potentially improve outcomes in liver cirrhosis.

Article Abstract

Liver fibrosis is a progressive pathological process resulting in an accumulation of excess extracellular matrix proteins. We discovered that bone morphogenetic protein 1-3 (BMP1-3), an isoform of the metalloproteinase Bmp1 gene, circulates in the plasma of healthy volunteers and its neutralization decreases the progression of chronic kidney disease in 5/6 nephrectomized rats. Here, we investigated the potential role of BMP1-3 in a chronic liver disease. Rats with carbon tetrachloride (CCl)-induced liver fibrosis were treated with monoclonal anti-BMP1-3 antibodies. Treatment with anti-BMP1-3 antibodies dose-dependently lowered the amount of collagen type I, downregulated the expression of Tgfb1, Itgb6, Col1a1, and Acta2 and upregulated the expression of Ctgf, Itgb1, and Dcn. Mehanistically, BMP1-3 inhibition decreased the plasma levels of transforming growth factor beta 1(TGFβ1) by prevention of its activation and lowered the prodecorin production further suppressing the TGFβ1 profibrotic effect. Our results suggest that BMP1-3 inhibitors have significant potential for decreasing the progression of fibrosis in liver cirrhosis.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/08977194.2018.1428966DOI Listing

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