Novel Therapeutic Targets and Emerging Treatments for Fibrosis

For decades we have known that the overgrowth, hardening and scarring of tissues (so-called fibrosis) represents the final common pathway and best histological predictor of disease progression in most organs. Fibrosis is the culmination of both excess extracellular matrix deposition due to ongoing o...

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Superior document:Frontiers Research Topics
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Year of Publication:2018
Language:English
Series:Frontiers Research Topics
Physical Description:1 electronic resource (162 p.)
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spelling Timothy D. Hewitson auth
Novel Therapeutic Targets and Emerging Treatments for Fibrosis
Frontiers Media SA 2018
1 electronic resource (162 p.)
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computer c rdamedia
online resource cr rdacarrier
Frontiers Research Topics
For decades we have known that the overgrowth, hardening and scarring of tissues (so-called fibrosis) represents the final common pathway and best histological predictor of disease progression in most organs. Fibrosis is the culmination of both excess extracellular matrix deposition due to ongoing or severe injury, and a failure to regenerate. An inadequate wound repair process ultimately results in organ failure through a loss of function, and is therefore a major cause of morbidity and mortality in disease affecting both multiple and individual organs.Whilst the pathology of fibrosis and its significance are well understood, until recently we have known little about its molecular regulation. Current therapies are often indirect and non-specific, and only slow progression by a matter of months. The recent identification of novel therapeutic targets, and the development of new treatment strategies based on them, offers the exciting prospect of more efficacious therapies to treat this debilitating disorder.This Research Topic therefore compromises several up-to-date mini-reviews on currently known and emerging therapeutic targets for fibrosis including: the Transforming Growth Factor (TGF)-family; epigenetic factors; Angiotensin II type 2 (AT2) receptors; mineralocorticoid receptors; adenosine receptors; caveolins; and the sphingosine kinase/sphingosine 1-phosphate and notch signaling pathways. In each case, mechanistic insights into how each of these factors contribute to regulating fibrosis progression are described, along with how they can be targeted (by existing drugs, small molecules or other mimetics) to prevent and/or reverse fibrosis and its contribution to tissue dysfunction and failure. Two additional reviews will discuss various anti-fibrotic therapies that have demonstrated efficacy at the experimental level, but are not yet clinically approved; and the therapeutic potential vs limitations of stem cell-based therapies for reducing fibrosis while facilitating tissue repair. Finally, this Research Topic concludes with a clinical perspective of various anti-fibrotic therapies for cardiovascular disease (CVD), outlining limitations of currently used therapies, the pipeline of anti-fibrotics for CVD and why so many anti-fibrotic drugs have failed at the clinical level.
English
treatment strategies
Fibrosis
pharmacology
collagen
fibrogenesis
therapeutic targets
2-88945-372-3
Chrishan S. Samuel auth
language English
format eBook
author Timothy D. Hewitson
spellingShingle Timothy D. Hewitson
Novel Therapeutic Targets and Emerging Treatments for Fibrosis
Frontiers Research Topics
author_facet Timothy D. Hewitson
Chrishan S. Samuel
author_variant t d h tdh
author2 Chrishan S. Samuel
author2_variant c s s css
author_sort Timothy D. Hewitson
title Novel Therapeutic Targets and Emerging Treatments for Fibrosis
title_full Novel Therapeutic Targets and Emerging Treatments for Fibrosis
title_fullStr Novel Therapeutic Targets and Emerging Treatments for Fibrosis
title_full_unstemmed Novel Therapeutic Targets and Emerging Treatments for Fibrosis
title_auth Novel Therapeutic Targets and Emerging Treatments for Fibrosis
title_new Novel Therapeutic Targets and Emerging Treatments for Fibrosis
title_sort novel therapeutic targets and emerging treatments for fibrosis
series Frontiers Research Topics
series2 Frontiers Research Topics
publisher Frontiers Media SA
publishDate 2018
physical 1 electronic resource (162 p.)
isbn 2-88945-372-3
illustrated Not Illustrated
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