Author:
Shen Kezhen,Zheng Shu-Sen,Park Ogyi,Wang Hua,Sun Zhaoli,Gao Bin
Abstract
Liver transplantation is presently the only curative treatment for patients with end-stage liver disease. However, the mechanisms underlying liver injury and hepatocyte proliferation posttransplantation remain obscure. In this investigation, liver injury and hepatocyte proliferation in syngeneic and allogeneic animal models were compared. Male Lewis and Dark Agouti (DA) rats were subjected to orthotopic liver transplantation (OLT). Rat OLT was performed in syngeneic (Lewis-Lewis) and allogeneic (Lewis-DA or DA-Lewis) animal models. Allogeneic liver grafts exhibited greater injury and cellular apoptosis than syngeneic grafts but less hepatocyte proliferation after OLT. Expression of IFN-γ mRNA and activation of the downstream signal transducer and activator of transcription 1 (STAT1) and genes (interferon regulatory factor-1 and cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor p21 CDKN1A) were also greater in the allogeneic grafts compared with the syngeneic grafts. In contrast, STAT3 activation was lower in the allogeneic grafts. Furthermore, in the allogeneic grafts, depletion of natural killer (NK) cells decreased IFN-γ/STAT1 activation but enhanced hepatocyte proliferation. These findings suggest that, compared with syngeneic transplantation, innate immunity (NK/IFN-γ) is activated after allogeneic transplantation, which likely contributes to liver injury and inhibits hepatocyte proliferation.
Publisher
American Physiological Society
Subject
Physiology (medical),Gastroenterology,Hepatology,Physiology
Cited by
33 articles.
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