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      Rosiglitazone abrogates bleomycin-induced scleroderma and blocks profibrotic responses through peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor-gamma.

      The American Journal of Pathology
      Adipocytes, cytology, Animals, Antibiotics, Antineoplastic, toxicity, Bleomycin, Cell Differentiation, drug effects, Cell Movement, Collagen, Female, Fibrosis, chemically induced, drug therapy, metabolism, Flow Cytometry, Fluorescent Antibody Technique, Gene Expression, Hypoglycemic Agents, pharmacology, Immunohistochemistry, Inflammation, Mice, Mice, Inbred BALB C, PPAR gamma, Reverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain Reaction, Scleroderma, Systemic, Stem Cells, Thiazolidinediones, Transforming Growth Factor beta1

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          Abstract

          The nuclear hormone receptor, peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor (PPAR)-gamma, originally identified as a key mediator of adipogenesis, is expressed widely and implicated in diverse biological responses. Both natural and synthetic agonists of PPAR-gamma abrogated the stimulation of collagen synthesis and myofibroblast differentiation induced by transforming growth factor (TGF)-beta in vitro. To characterize the role of PPAR-gamma in the fibrotic process in vivo, the synthetic agonist rosiglitazone was used in a mouse model of scleroderma. Rosiglitazone attenuated bleomycin-induced skin inflammation and dermal fibrosis as well as subcutaneous lipoatrophy and counteracted the up-regulation of collagen gene expression and myofibroblast accumulation in the lesioned skin. Rosiglitazone treatment reduced the induction of the early-immediate transcription factor Egr-1 in situ without also blocking the activation of Smad2/3. In both explanted fibroblasts and skin organ cultures, rosiglitazone prevented the stimulation of collagen gene transcription and cell migration elicited by TGF-beta. Rosiglitazone-driven adipogenic differentiation of both fibroblasts and preadipocytes was abrogated in the presence of TGF-beta; this effect was accompanied by the concomitant down-regulation of cellular PPAR-gamma mRNA expression. Collectively, these results indicate that rosiglitazone treatment attenuates inflammation, dermal fibrosis, and subcutaneous lipoatrophy via PPAR-gamma in a mouse model of scleroderma and suggest that pharmacological PPAR-gamma ligands, widely used as insulin sensitizers in the treatment of type-2 diabetes mellitus, may be potential therapies for scleroderma.

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