Periostin, an extracellular matrix protein that plays a crucial role in skin development and maintaining homeostasis, is also involved in skin disorders such as systemic/limited scleroderma, wound closure, and abnormal scar formation.
Periostin localizes in the papillary dermis of normal skin, and is aberrantly expressed in the dermis of lesional skin in atopic dermatitis, scar, systemic/limited scleroderma, melanoma, cutaneous T cell lymphoma, and skin damage caused by allergic/autoimmune responses.
Subsequently, studies of FBN1 single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) demonstrated that certain FBN1 haplotypes were associated with SSc in both Native American and Japanese patients with limited scleroderma.
In particular, a high frequency of anti-Fibrillin-1 was observed in Japanese patients with diffuse and limited scleroderma or CREST (calcinosis, Raynaud phenomenon, esophageal dysmotility, sclerodactyly, telangiectasia) syndrome.