Transforming growth factor-β1 may be a key mediator of the fibrogenic properties of neural cells in leprosy.

JOURNAL OF NEUROPATHOLOGY AND EXPERIMENTAL NEUROLOGY(2013)

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Abstract
Fibrosis is the main cause of irreversible nerve damage in leprosy. Phenotypic changes in Mycobacterium leprae (ML)-infected Schwann cells (SCs) have been suggested to mediate this process. We found that SC line cultures stimulated with ML upregulated transforming growth factor-beta 1 (TGF-beta 1), and that TGF-beta 1 or ML induced increased numbers of alpha-smooth muscle actin (alpha-SMA)-positive cells with characteristic stress fibers. Mycobacterium leprae and TGF-beta 1 also induced increased type I collagen and fibronectin mRNA and secretion and augmented mRNA levels of SOX9 and ZEB1, which are involved in the epithelial-mesenchymal transition. These effects could be inhibited by the TGF-beta 1 type I receptor (ALK5) inhibitor, SB-431542. In nerve biopsies from leprosy-infected patients with varying grades of fibrosis (n = 11), type I and III collagen and fibronectin were found in the endoneurium and perineurium, alpha-SMA-positive cells filled the fibrotic perineurium but not the endoneurium, and CD34-positive fibroblasts predominated in the endoneurium. Results of transcriptional studies of 3 leprosy nerves and 5 controls were consistent with these data, but alpha-SMA and other mRNA levels were not different from those in the control samples. Our findings suggest that TGF-beta 1 may orchestrate events, including reprogramming of the SC phenotype, leading to transdifferentiation, connective tissue cell expansion, and fibrogenesis in the evolution of leprosy nerve lesions during some evolutionary stages.
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Key words
alpha-Smooth muscle actin,Fibrosis,Leprosy,Mycobacterium leprae,Peripheral neuropathy,Schwann cell,Transforming growth factor-beta 1
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