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H Takagi, M S Ochoa, L Zhou, T Helfman, H Murata, V Falanga
J Clin Invest. 1995;
96(5):2120
doi:10.1172/JCI118265
Abstract |
Full text
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T
he pathogenesis of the eosinophilia myalgia syndrome (EMS) remains unclear. Several abnormal constituents have been found in the L-tryptophan lots responsible for the illness, particularly, 1,1-ethylidenebis[L-tryptophan], also called peak E or EBT, and 3-phenylamino-alanine or peak 5. However, the role of these contaminants in the pathogenesis of EMS and in the development of fibrosis is unknown. We now report that peak E, a dimer of L-tryptophan, is a potent stimulus for human dermal fibroblast DNA and collagen synthesis. Peak E (0.1-1.0 microM) increased DNA synthesis up to four-fold (P = 0.0001) in a dose-dependent manner (r = 0.987). When added to monolayer cultures for 2 to 24 h, peak E (0.5 to 100 microM) caused a progressive, more than threefold increase in alpha 1(I) procollagen mRNA levels and collagenous protein. No increase in procollagen mRNA levels was found after the addition of another major L-tryptophan contaminant, peak 5, or with L-tryptophan itself. Transient transfection with a 2.5-kb alpha 1(I) procollagen promoter-luciferase construct showed that peak E causes a twofold upregulation of promoter activity (P = 0.022). Contraction of collagen gels, consisting of human dermal fibroblasts incorporated into a type I collagen lattice, was enhanced two-fold by exposure to peak E (P = 0.001). We conclude that a major constituent of contaminated batches of L-tryptophan, peak E, is a potent stimulus for fibroblast activation and collagen synthesis. This stimulatory action of peak E may provide a direct mechanism for the development of fibrosis in EMS.
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(13)
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2005 |
Full-thickness wounding of the mouse tail as a model for delayed wound healing: accelerated wound closure in Smad3 knock-out mice
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Cellular interactions and degradation of aliphatic poly(ester amide)s derived from glycine and/or 4-amino butyric acid
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Biomaterials
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2003 |
Fibroblasts from chronic wounds show altered TGF-?-signaling and decreased TGF-? Type II Receptor expression
Byung-Chul Kim, Heung Tae Kim, Seok Hee Park, Ji-Sun Cha, Tatyana Yufit, Seong-Jin Kim, Vincent Falanga
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J. Cell. Physiol.
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2003 |
Low oxygen tension stimulates collagen synthesis and COL1A1 transcription through the action of TGF-?1
Vincent Falanga, Linda Zhou, Tatyana Yufit
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J. Cell. Physiol.
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2002 |
Slow release iodine preparation and wound healing: in vitro effects consistent with lack of in vivo toxicity in human chronic wounds
L.H. Zhou, W.K. Nahm, E. Badiavas, T. Yufit, V. Falanga
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Br J Dermatol
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2002 |
Sustained ability for fibroblast outgrowth from stored neonatal foreskin: a model for studying mechanisms of fibroblast outgrowth
Walter K Nahm, Linda Zhou, Vincent Falanga
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Journal of Dermatological Science
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2002 |
Modern Nutrition
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Tryptophan
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2001 |
Un-cross-linked fibrin substrates inhibit keratinocyte spreading and replication: Correction with fibronectin and factor XIII cross-linking
Eduardo Weiss, Yuji Yamaguchi, Anna Falabella, Saara Crane, Yasutaka Tokuda, Vincent Falanga
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J. Cell. Physiol.
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1998 |
Stimulation of Collagen Synthesis by the Anabolic Steroid Stanozolol
Vincent Falanga, Adam S Greenberg, Linda Zhou, Sofia M Ochoa, Anita B Roberts, Anna Falabella, Yuji Yamaguchi
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J Invest Dermatol
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1998 |
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