Mediators of Inflammation (Jan 2015)

Tissue Transglutaminase-Regulated Transformed Growth Factor-β1 in the Parasite Links Schistosoma japonicum Infection with Liver Fibrosis

  • Juanjuan Tang,
  • Xunmin Zhu,
  • Jingjing Zhao,
  • Mingchiu Fung,
  • Yinyan Li,
  • Zhiyan Gao,
  • Suikai Yan,
  • Xiaomin Li,
  • Xiaofang Ji,
  • Fang Su,
  • Zi Li

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1155/2015/659378
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 2015

Abstract

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Transforming growth factor (TGF-β1) is among the strongest factors of liver fibrogenesis, but its association with Schistosoma-caused liver fibrosis is controversial. Tissue transglutaminase (tTG) is the principal enzyme controlling TGF-β1 maturation and contributes to Sj-infected liver fibrosis. Here we aim to explore the consistency between tTG and TGF-β1 and TGF-β1 source and its correlation with liver fibrosis after Sj-infection. TGF-β1 was upregulated at weeks 6 and 8 upon liver fibrosis induction. During tTG inhibition, TGF-β1 level decreased in sera and liver of infected mice. TGF-β1 showed positive staining in liver containing Sj adult worms and eggs. TGF-β1 was also detected in Sj adult worm sections, soluble egg antigen and Sj adult worm antigen, and adult worms’ culture medium. The TGF-β1 mature peptide cDNA sequence and its extended sequence were amplified through RT-PCR and RACE-PCR using adult worms as template, and sequence is analyzed and loaded to NCBI GenBank (number GQ338152.1). TGF-β1 transcript in Sj eggs was higher than in adult worms. In Sj-infected liver, transcriptional level of TGF-β1 from Sj, but not mouse liver, correlated with liver fibrosis extent. This study provides evidence that tTG regulates TGF-β1 and illustrates the importance of targeting tTG in treating Sj infection-induced fibrosis.