University of California, San Diego researchers have proven in animal studies that fibrosis in the liver can be not only stopped, but reversed. Their discovery, to be published in PLoS Online on December 26, opens the door to treating and curing conditions that lead to excessive tissue scarring such as viral hepatitis, fatty liver disease, cirrhosis, pulmonary fibrosis, scleroderma and burns.
Six years ago, the UC San Diego School of Medicine research team discovered the cause of the excess fibrous tissue growth that leads to liver fibrosis and cirrhosis, and developed a way to block excess scar tissue in mice. At that time, the best hope seemed to be future development of a therapy that would prevent or stop damage in patients suffering from the excessive scarring related to liver or lung disease or severe burns.
In their current study, Martina Buck, Ph.D., assistant professor of medicine at UCSD and the Veterans Affairs San Diego Healthcare System, and Mario Chojkier, M.D., UCSD professor of medicine and liver specialist at the VA, show that by blocking a protein linked to overproduction of scar tissue, they can not only stop the progression of fibrosis in mice, but reverse some of the cell damage that already occurred.
In response to liver injury – for example, cirrhosis caused by alcohol – hepatic stellate cell (HSC) activated by oxidative stress results in large amounts of collagen. Collagen is necessary to heal wounds, but excessive collagen causes scars in tissues. In this paper, the researchers showed that activation of a protein called RSK results in HSC activation and is critical for the progression of liver fibrosis. They theorized that the RSK pathway would be a potential therapeutic target, and developed an RSK inhibitory peptide to block activation of RSK.
The scientists used mice with severe liver fibrosis – similar to the condition in humans with cirrhosis of the liver – that was induced by chronic treatment with a liver toxin known to cause liver damage. The animals, which continued on the liver toxin, were given the RSK-inhibitory peptide. The peptide inhibited RSK activation, which stopped the HSC from proliferating. The peptide also directly activated the caspase or “executioner" protein, which killed the cells producing liver cirrhosis but not the normal cells.
“All control mice had severe liver fibrosis, while all mice that received the RSK-inhibitory peptide had minimal or no liver fibrosis,” said Buck.
Buck explained that the excessive collagen response is blocked by the RSK-inhibitory peptide, but isn’t harmful to the liver. “The cells continue to do their normal, healing work but their excess proliferation is controlled,” Buck said. “Remarkably, the death of HSC may also allow recovery from liver injury and reversal of liver fibrosis.”
The researchers found a similar activation of RSK in activated HSC in humans with severe liver fibrosis but not in control livers, suggesting that this pathway is also relevant in human liver fibrosis. Liver biopsies from patients with liver fibrosis also showed activated RSK.
The study expands on work reported in 2001 in the journal Molecular Cell announcing that a team led by Buck had found that a small piece of an important regulatory protein called C/EBP beta was responsible for fibrous tissue growth, or excessive scar tissue following injury or illness. When normal scarring goes awry, excessive build-up of fibrous tissue can produce disfiguring scars or clog vital internal organs and lead to serious complications. Buck and colleagues developed a mutated protein that stopped this excessive fibrous tissue growth.
“Six years ago, we showed a way to prevent or stop the excessive scarring in animal models,” said Buck. “Our latest finding proves that we can actually reverse the damage.”
Worldwide, almost 800,000 people die from liver cirrhosis each year, and there is currently no treatment for it. Excessive tissue repair in chronic liver disease induced by viral, toxic, immunologic and metabolic disorders all result in excessive scar tissue, and could benefit from therapy developed from the UCSD researchers’ findings.
The research was supported by grants from the National Institutes of Health, the Department of Veterans Affairs and UCSD’s Medical Research Foundation. Buck is the recipient of a Howard Temin Award from the National Cancer Institute.
From http://www.ucsd.edu
Comments
link to the research article
August 17, 2009 by Anonymous, 11 weeks 5 days ago
Comment id: 44160
http://www.plosone.org/article/info%3Adoi%2F10.1371%2Fjournal.pone.0001372
Diabetic
July 11, 2009 by Anonymous, 17 weeks 15 hours ago
Comment id: 37910
We have a plant juice which is very active agaginst diabetic. But when the plant part is kept for few days, few microorganism grow inside plant part. The contaminated plant juice also reduces Blood glucose level of mouse but seriousely affected the liver and within 12 hours the treated mice died. On the other hand the fresh plant juice treated mice survive.
This juice prevent alloxan action to induce diabetic on mice. This is a great finding about this plant juice.
We are now searching the cause of such toxicity. We are also trying to find out whether this juice could recover diabetic induced mice to normal. Since it reduces blood sugar level and lipid profile of the alloxan induced diabetic mice and also prevent alloxan action in the process of inducing diabetic, we are expecting a good antidiabetic drug from it. This drug will not only control diabetic but may cure diabetic diseases.
Dr.Md. Anwar Ul Islam
Professor
Department of Pharmacy
University of Rajshahi
Rajshahi-6205
Bangladesh.
Email: profanwarulislam@yahoo.com
THANK YOU!!!
May 28, 2009 by Anonymous, 23 weeks 2 days ago
Comment id: 36906
You have given me some very needed hope>GOD BLESS YOU AND YOURS!!
can you cite the sources for
May 2, 2009 by Anonymous, 27 weeks 1 day ago
Comment id: 36477
can you cite the sources for this info. Journal articles would be prefered
Hang in there
April 15, 2009 by Anonymous, 29 weeks 4 days ago
Comment id: 36153
Did you try Oxymatrine?
Liver disease
April 5, 2009 by Anonymous, 31 weeks 11 hours ago
Comment id: 35841
Japan has reversed Cirrhosis and so has England but my guess is we won't see these cures as I believe it is all about the money in this greedy country!
Hang in there
April 1, 2009 by Anonymous, 31 weeks 4 days ago
Comment id: 35750
It will probably be awhile before this or any drug treatment for cirrhosis becomes available. In the meantime, try to eat well. Silymarin (milk thistle extract) can also help to protect the liver from further damage, and BCAA's (branched chain amino acids) and whey based supplements as used by bodybuilders can help prevent muscle wasting. Red meats,
salt, and excess vitamin A should be avoided.
Sulfasalazine, a drug commonly used for Crohn's disease, has been tried with some success in reversing cirrhosis. Stronger analogues have also been synthesized and are under investigation. Such experimental drug regimes always require close medical supervision and monitoring and may also carry some grave risks including death, but for those with advanced cirrhosis and little or no chance of a transplant, they may be an option. Small interfering RNA (si-RNA) is also under study. The research is very promising as mechanisms for potential reversal of the disease are now being discovered, but from research to market typically takes many years.
For anyone desperately trying to save a loved one please be careful and don't get scammed by false claims for miracle cures. There are at this time no drugs or herbal remedies known to cure cirrhosis. Although some may be helpful, many will do more harm than good. I would know. I've worked for a few international pharmaceutical companies. I'm an organic chemistry, biochem, herb and nutrition nut and I've spent
years looking for a cure. The love of my life is still dying of cirrhosis and I would do anything to help, but all I can do is pray.
Of course we may yet discover some other natural-source protein(s) that have the same effects in humans as the mutated protein successfully used in mice to reverse cirrhosis. Who knows? God is great. Keep the Faith.
Namaste.
cirrhosis
December 26, 2008 by Anonymous, 45 weeks 2 days ago
Comment id: 33529
please publish more on reversal of liver cirrhosis thank you robin
need to know if this works desperately
September 29, 2008 by Anonymous, 1 year 5 weeks ago
Comment id: 32192
My father has cirrhosis due to blood transfusion. He is very bad right now, and is currently in hospital with renal failure, he is recovering but the ascetis is not decreasing ....
Need to know if this solution works and is available.....
if yes where can one get it and how soon???
please revert.
Gajendra
Bombay India
availability
August 22, 2008 by Anonymous, 1 year 11 weeks ago
Comment id: 31601
Hi did you get any response as to when such a drug would become available for humans?
Thanks
Need you help please
May 4, 2008 by Anonymous, 1 year 26 weeks ago
Comment id: 29602
Hi,
My name is Ezani from Malaysia. My father has cirrhosis. Kindly help me please if you have the solution. contact me at ezaniafzan@gmail.com. Thank you
Just wondering
April 6, 2008 by Anonymous, 1 year 30 weeks ago
Comment id: 28609
If there is a type of medication that can be taken to reverse cirhosis of the liver, can people who have developed Diabetes II from the disease be able to reverse it too? I would like to know who I need to refer these kind of questions to.? So if anyone knows would you please let me know? Also, can I ask my transplant center/drs. what they think? Best of luck to everyone. Recovering from cirrhosis without surgery would be great! How soon could this become a alternative. Please email me at shannonc36@yahoo.com
Best regards.
Need help
March 29, 2008 by Anonymous, 1 year 32 weeks ago
Comment id: 28393
hi my name is Rishi Bhanot and my father is having this cirrhosis of liver. I am very interested in any such medication if atall available which can help in reversing the damages already done or atleast which can improve his condition to lead reasonably good quality life. Currently he is facing the complications of ascites and encephalopathy.
I would really appreciate if i can get any help.
Thanks alot in advance!
Can contact me on rishibhanot@yahoo.com or
+91 9910036002
I'm very interested in the
March 25, 2008 by Anonymous, 1 year 32 weeks ago
Comment id: 28307
I'm very interested in the possibility of reversing cirrhosis. I wonder how many other trials will there have to be before the treatment will be available to the public? Because, currently the only treatment available for "cirrhosis" is liver transplantation and not everyone may either be willing to have it or unable to, due to other health conditions. And unfortunately there isn't any sort of liver dialysis available yet, although I heard that a product called Sepet is already in clinical trials. But even so - this would be a tremendous boost to the treatment of liver diseases.
liver
February 18, 2008 by Anonymous, 1 year 37 weeks ago
Comment id: 27615
Hi my name is john i have cirrhosis of the liver to did you get help for your mother? iam looking for that same help please get back to me
I need your help
January 29, 2008 by Anonymous, 1 year 40 weeks ago
Comment id: 27228
Hello! My name is Adrian Prisacariu and i am a young doctor from Romania. My mother is suferring from Liver Cirrhosis and i discover on the internet that in your university a group of researchers have identified a sintetic protein that can stop the evolution of the cirrhosis and even cure the excess of fibrous tisue. My request is, if is possible, to give me a mail adress of one of the researchers because i whant to ask him/ her if there is a drug on the market and how i can secure it and buy it from U.S.A. The name of one of the researchers is Martina Buck, Ph.D. My e-mail adress is: adi_prisacariu@yahoo.com. I thank you with anticipation!
Your's Adrian Prisacariu
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