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Extensive and Persistent Extravascular Dermal Fibrin Deposition Characterizes Systemic Sclerosis.

Jeffrey L BrowningJag BhawanAnna Elise TsengNicholas A CrosslandAndreea M BujorKaterina AkassoglouShervin AssassiBrian SkaugJonathan Ho
Published in: bioRxiv : the preprint server for biology (2023)
Systemic sclerosis (SSc) is an autoimmune disease characterized by progressive multiorgan fibrosis. While the cause of SSc remains unknown, a perturbed vasculature is considered a critical early step in the pathogenesis. Using fibrinogen as a marker of vascular leakage, we found extensive extravascular fibrinogen deposition in the dermis of both limited and diffuse systemic sclerosis disease, and it was present in both early and late-stage patients. Based on a timed series of excision wounds, retention on the fibrin deposit of the splice variant domain, fibrinogen α E C, indicated a recent event, while fibrin networks lacking the α E C domain were older. Application of this timing tool to SSc revealed considerable heterogeneity in α E C domain distribution providing unique insight into disease activity. Intriguingly, the fibrinogen-α E C domain also accumulated in macrophages. These observations indicate that systemic sclerosis is characterized by ongoing vascular leakage resulting in extensive interstitial fibrin deposition that is either continually replenished and/or there is impaired fibrin clearance. Unresolved fibrin deposition might then incite chronic tissue remodeling.
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