TY - JOUR
T1 - Cartilage-like composition of keloid scar extracellular matrix suggests fibroblast mis-differentiation in disease
AU - Barallobre-Barreiro, Javier
AU - Woods, Elizabeth
AU - Bell, Rachel Emma
AU - Easton, Jennifer Anne
AU - Hobbs, Carl
AU - Eager, Michael
AU - Baig, Ferheen
AU - MacKenzie Ross, Alastair
AU - Mallipeddi, Rajeev
AU - Powell, Barry
AU - Soldin, Mark
AU - Mayr, Manuel
AU - Shaw, Tanya J
PY - 2019/10/30
Y1 - 2019/10/30
N2 - Following wound damage to the skin, the scarring spectrum is wide-ranging, from a manageable normal scar through to pathological keloids. The question remains whether these fibrotic lesions represent simply a quantitative extreme, or alternatively, whether they are qualitatively distinct. A three-way comparison of the extracellular matrix (ECM) composition of normal skin, normal scar and keloids was performed using quantitative discovery-based proteomics. This approach identified 40 proteins that were significantly altered in keloids compared to normal scars, and strikingly, 23 keloid-unique proteins. The major alterations in keloids, when functionally grouped, showed many changes in proteins involved in ECM assembly and fibrillogenesis, but also a keloid-associated loss of proteases, and a unique cartilage-like composition, which was also evident histologically. The presence of Aggrecan and Collagen II in keloids suggest greater plasticity and mis-differentiation of the constituent cells. This study characterises the ECM of both scar types to a depth previously underappreciated. This thorough molecular description of keloid lesions relative to normal scars is an essential step towards our understanding of this debilitating clinical problem, and how best to treat it.
AB - Following wound damage to the skin, the scarring spectrum is wide-ranging, from a manageable normal scar through to pathological keloids. The question remains whether these fibrotic lesions represent simply a quantitative extreme, or alternatively, whether they are qualitatively distinct. A three-way comparison of the extracellular matrix (ECM) composition of normal skin, normal scar and keloids was performed using quantitative discovery-based proteomics. This approach identified 40 proteins that were significantly altered in keloids compared to normal scars, and strikingly, 23 keloid-unique proteins. The major alterations in keloids, when functionally grouped, showed many changes in proteins involved in ECM assembly and fibrillogenesis, but also a keloid-associated loss of proteases, and a unique cartilage-like composition, which was also evident histologically. The presence of Aggrecan and Collagen II in keloids suggest greater plasticity and mis-differentiation of the constituent cells. This study characterises the ECM of both scar types to a depth previously underappreciated. This thorough molecular description of keloid lesions relative to normal scars is an essential step towards our understanding of this debilitating clinical problem, and how best to treat it.
U2 - 10.1016/j.mbplus.2019.100016
DO - 10.1016/j.mbplus.2019.100016
M3 - Article
SN - 2590-0285
JO - Matrix Biology Plus
JF - Matrix Biology Plus
ER -