CONTACT: Doug Carlson
(850) 645-1255
doug.carlson@med.fsu.edu
By Doug Carlson
October 2008FSU RESEARCHER’S DISCOVERY LEADS TO
$1.5 MILLION GRANT,
POTENTIAL NEW TREATMENT OF LIVER FIBROSIS
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Branko Stefanovic Ph.D. |
TALLAHASSEE, Fla. -- The discovery of a protein involved in the
life-threatening mechanism of liver fibrosis has helped a researcher
at the Florida State University College of Medicine attract a $1.5
million grant from the National Institutes of Health. Branko Stefanovic, associate professor in the department of
biomedical sciences at the College of Medicine, hopes his discovery
could lead to treatment methods that may stem the process of liver
fibrosis. Cirrhosis, the terminal phase of the disease, kills 26,000
Americans each year -- the ninth leading cause of death in the
United States.
Liver fibrosis refers to the accumulation of excess scar tissue in
the liver through excess deposits of collagen, a fibrous protein
found in skin, bone, and other connective tissues. The formation of
scar tissue is a normal bodily response to injury, but in fibrosis
the scarring begins to accumulate to unacceptable levels. The
process can result from one of multiple causes, the most frequent of
which are alcohol abuse and hepatitis C infection.
Fibrosis is difficult to detect until collagen deposits reach a
point where the scarring has severely impaired organ function,
meaning individuals suffering from the disease typically do not
receive any treatment until it’s too late.
“The capacity of liver cells to regenerate is great, so therefore
normally the primary diseases that can lead to fibrosis do not kill
the patient,” Stefanovic said. “What kills the patient is secondary
scarring and the replacement of normal liver tissue with scar
tissue. Once this happens a liver cannot regenerate anymore.”
Stefanovic and his research team made the important discovery of a
protein involved in the scar formation process while working on a
previous NIH grant. The RNA-binding protein, which Stefanovic has
successfully cloned in his lab at the College of Medicine, is found
at the place and specific time when the body is making collagen as
part of the normal wound healing resulting from the body’s efforts
to repair injured tissue.
“We had evidence of its existence, but we didn’t have the protein,”
Stefanovic said. “We had been looking for this particular protein
for several years until we used some very sophisticated methods of
cloning. When I saw the results of the binding of the protein to our
target I knew immediately we had found the right one.’’
Stefanovic said he doesn’t believe there will ever be a cure for
liver fibrosis but that research and development will one day lead
physicians to be able to slow down the progress of the disease.
“At least if we slow down the chronic process, instead of dying in
five years the patient will live 15 years or more,’’ he said.
“The goal is to suppress excessive collagen synthesis. In order to
do that we have to know the molecular mechanisms that regulate
manufacture of the protein and then see what has gone wrong when the
liver is creating excess collagen.
“Then we will be able to find specific points in this process where
we can intervene, by designing either a drug of some kind or a
therapeutic agent that will allow us to block these key points and
slow down the scarring. Cloning of this protein is a major step
toward this goal.”
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