Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1963667 Cellular Signalling 2012 7 Pages PDF
Abstract

Persistent fibroblast activation in wound repair is believed to be the key reason for fibrosis and transforming growth factor (TGF)β is considered as one of the key mediators for the fibrogenic response, with the detailed mechanism largely unknown. Here we found that TGFβ1 treatment could induce a significant increase of endogenous TGFβ1 expression by enhancing the mRNA stability in cardiac fibroblasts. Further study revealed that TGFβ1 treatment translocated the nuclear HuR into cytoplasm, which in turn bound the ARE in the 3′UTR of TGFβ1 and increased the mRNA stability as seen from the RNA-IP and reporter assay. Knockdown of HuR decreased the endogenous expression of TGFβ1 under exogenous TGFβ1 treatment, simultaneously with the decrease of Col1a, Col3a and fibronectin expression. Our study here established a TGFβ1/HuR feedback circuit regulating the fibrogenic response in fibroblasts, and targeting this feedback loop is of great potential to control fibrosis.

► TGFβ1 induced HuR cytoplasmic translocation. ► HuR increased the TGFβ1 mRNA stability. ► Exogenous TGFβ1 increased endogenous TGFβ1 through HuR activation. ► Involvement of TGFβ1/HuR feedback loop in fibrogenic response.

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