1,720,967 research outputs found
Cultured Hepatocytes Adopt Progenitor Characteristics and Display Bipotent Capacity to Repopulate the Liver
Clinical studies have proved the therapeutic potential of hepatocyte transplantation as a promising alternative to whole organ liver transplantation in the treatment of hereditary or end-stage liver disease. However, donor shortage seriously restricts cell availability, and the lack of appropriate cell culture protocols for the storage and maintenance of donor cells constitutes a significant obstacle. The aim of this study was to stimulate mature hepatocytes in culture to multiply in vitro and track their fate on transplantation. Rat hepatocytes isolated nonenzymatically were cultured serum free for up to 10 days. They were stimulated into proliferation in the presence of growth factors and conditioned media from nonparenchymal and hepatocyte culture supernatants, as well as 10 mM lithium chloride (LiCl). Cell proliferation was assessed by determining DNA content. Additionally, the extent of cell differentiation was estimated using immunofluorescence staining of hepatic, biliary, progenitor, and mesenchymal markers and gene expression analyses. Transplantation studies were performed on the Fischer CD26-mutant rat following pretreatment with retrorsine and partial hepatectomy. Proliferating hepatocytes increasingly adopted precursor characteristics, expressing progenitor (OV6, CD133), hepatic lineage (CK18), biliary (CD49f, CK7, CK19), and mesenchymal (vimentin) markers. The supplement of LiCl further enhanced the proliferative capacity by 30%. Transplantation studies revealed extensive repopulation by large donor hepatocyte clusters. Furthermore, bile duct-like structures deriving from donor cells proved to be immunoreactive to ductular markers and formed in close proximity to endogenous bile ducts. Mature hepatocytes reveal their potential to "switch" between phenotypes, adopting progenitor characteristics during proliferation in vitro. Following transplantation, these "retrodifferentiated" cells further expanded in vivo, thereby generating bipotentially differentiated progenies (hepatocytes and bile duct-like structures). This apparent plasticity of mature hepatocytes may open new approaches for cell-based strategies to treat liver disease
Zonal hierarchy of differentiation markers and nestin expression during oval cell mediated rat liver regeneration
Oval cells constitute a heterogeneous population of proliferating progenitors found in rat livers following carcinogenic treatment (2-acetylaminofluorene and 70% hepatectomy). The aim of this study was to investigate the cellular pattern of various differentiation and cell type markers in this model of liver regeneration. Immunophenotypic characterisation revealed at least two subtypes emerging from the portal field. First, a population of oval cells formed duct-like structures and expressed bile duct (CD49f) as well as hepatocytic markers (alpha-foetoprotein, CD26). Second, a population of non-ductular oval cells was detected between and distally from the ductules expressing the neural marker nestin and the haematopoietic marker Thy1. Following oval cell isolation, a subset of the nestin-positive cells was shown to co-express hepatocytic and epithelial markers (albumin, CD26, pancytokeratin) and could be clearly distinguished from anti-desmin reactive hepatic stellate cells. The gene expression profiles (RT-PCR) of isolated oval cells and oval cell liver tissue were found to be similar to foetal liver (ED14). The present results suggest that the two oval cell populations are organised in a zonal hierarchy with a marker gradient from the inner (displaying hepatocytic and biliary markers) to the outer zone (showing hepatocytic and extrahepatic progenitor markers) of the proliferating progeny clusters
Mitochondrial inhibition prior to oxygen-withdrawal facilitates the occurrence of hypoxia-induced spreading depression in rat hippocampal slices
Oxygen withdrawal blocks mitochondrial respiration. In rat hippocampal slices, this triggers a massive depolarization of CA1 neurons and a negative shift of the extracellular DC potential, the characteristic sign of hypoxia-induced spreading depression (HSD). To unveil the contribution of mitochondria to the sensing of hypoxia and the ignition of HSD, we modified mitochondrial function. Mitochondrial uncoupling by carbonyl cyanide 4-(trifluoromethoxy) phenylhydrazone ( FCCP, 1 mu M) prior to hypoxia hastened the onset and shortened the duration of HSD. Blocking mitochondrial ATP synthesis by oligomycin ( 10 mu g/ml) was without effect. Inhibition of mitochondrial respiration by rotenone (20 mu M), diphenyleneiodonium (25 mu M), or antimycin A (20 mu M) also hastened HSD onset and shortened HSD duration. 3-nitropropionic acid (1 mM) increased HSD duration. Cyanide ( 100 mu M) hastened HSD onset and increased HSD duration. At higher concentrations, cyanide (1 mM), azide (2 mM), and FCCP (10 mu M) triggered SD episodes on their own. Compared with control HSD, the spatial extent of the intrinsic optical signals of cyanide- and azide-induced SDs was more pronounced. Monitoring NADH ( nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide) and FAD (flavin adenine dinucleotide) autofluorescence and mitochondrial membrane potential verified the mitochondrial targeting by the drugs used. Except 1 mM cyanide, no treatment reduced cellular ATP levels severely and no correlation was found between ATP, NADH, or FAD levels and the time to HSD onset. Therefore ATP depletion or a cytosolic reducing shift due to NADH/FADH(2) accumulation cannot serve as a general explanation for the hastening of HSD onset on mitochondrial inhibition. Additional redox couples (glutathione) or events downstream of the mitochondrial depolarization need to be considered
Maintaining hepatocyte differentiation in vitro through co-culture with hepatic stellate cells
Primary hepatocytes lose their differentiated functions rapidly when in culture. Our aim was to maintain the differentiated status of hepatocytes in vitro by means of vital hepatic stellate cells (HSCs), their soluble and particulate factors and lipid extracts. Hepatocytes were placed into collagen-coated culture dishes in the presence of HSCs at different ages of pre-culture, with or without direct cell to cell contacts, at different cell ratios and in monoculture with cellular HSC components in place of vital cells. Changes in morphology and enhancement of phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase (PCK) activity by glucagon were used to determine the differentiated status of hepatocytes in 2d-short-term culture. HSCs proved able to maintain the differentiated function of hepatocytes in co-culture either by direct cell contacts or via factors derived from HSC-conditioned medium. In comparison, however, without cellular contact to hepatocytes five to ten times as many HSCs were necessary to increase the PCK activity to the same degree as in the presence of intercellular contacts. Whereas stimulation in the presence of HSC/hepatocyte contacts was independent of HSC culture age only quiescent, resting HSCs (precultured for 1-2 d) were able to stimulate hepatocytes significantly via soluble factors. Culturing of hepatocytes with a lipid extract or a particulate fraction from HSCs clearly displayed a very strong beneficial effect on enzyme activity and morphology. HSCs maintain hepatocyte function and structure through preferentially cell-bound signalling and transfer of lipids
Effects of paracetamol on NOS, COX, and CYP activity and on oxidative stress in healthy male subjects, rat hepatocytes, and recombinant NOS.
Paracetamol (acetaminophen) is a widely used analgesic drug. It interacts with various enzyme families including cytochrome P450 (CYP), cyclooxygenase (COX), and nitric oxide synthase (NOS), and this interplay may produce reactive oxygen species (ROS). We investigated the effects of paracetamol on prostacyclin, thromboxane, nitric oxide (NO), and oxidative stress in four male subjects who received a single 3 g oral dose of paracetamol. Thromboxane and prostacyclin synthesis was assessed by measuring their major urinary metabolites 2,3-dinor-thromboxane B2 and 2,3-dinor-6-ketoprostaglandin F(1α), respectively. Endothelial NO synthesis was assessed by measuring nitrite in plasma. Urinary 15(S)-8-iso-prostaglanding F(2α) was measured to assess oxidative stress. Plasma oleic acid oxide (cis-EpOA) was measured as a marker of cytochrome P450 activity. Upon paracetamol administration, prostacyclin synthesis was strongly inhibited, while NO synthesis increased and thromboxane synthesis remained almost unchanged. Paracetamol may shift the COX-dependent vasodilatation/vasoconstriction balance at the cost of vasodilatation. This effect may be antagonized by increasing endothelial NO synthesis. High-dosed paracetamol did not increase oxidative stress. At pharmacologically relevant concentrations, paracetamol did not affect NO synthesis/bioavailability by recombinant human endothelial NOS or inducible NOS in rat hepatocytes. We conclude that paracetamol does not increase oxidative stress in humans
Über den Einfluss von Palmitin- und Linolsäure auf die Entstehung von Lipidakkumulaten unter der Bedingung von Hyperglykämie und Hyperinsulinämie und den protektiven Wirkungen eines ethanolischen Extraktes aus Gynostemma pentaphyllum in primären Hepatozytenkulturen
Universität Magdeburg, Dissertation, 2015vorgelegt von Christian Müller aus Brandenburg/Have
Role of carbon monoxide and nitric oxide in adult rat hepatocytes proliferating in vitro: Effects of CAS 1609
During liver regeneration in vivo carbon monoxide (CO) and nitric oxide (NO) are supposed to play a significant role. We raise the question whether CO and NO are involved in the growth process of cultured hepatocytes. Rat hepatocytes were stimulated into proliferation, growth being estimated by DNA content, mRNA by quantitative RT-PCR, and inducible NO synthase (iNOS) activity by GC-MS. Dexamethasone proved obligatory for fast proliferation. It suppressed the spontaneous rise of iNOS-mRNA in cultures devoid of glucocorticoids, but did not counteract the rise in mRNA in actively dividing cultures. Expression of iNOS-mRNA and cell growth were further enhanced by LiCl (10 mM). NOS activity was completely suppressed by the iNOS-specific inhibitors N-(3-(aminomethyl)benzyl) acetamidine (1400 W,100 mu M) and L-N(6)-(1-iminoethyl)lysine (L-NIL, 500 mu M), however, without a decrease in hepatocyte growth. Proliferation was attenuated only by very high concentrations (>0.5 mM) of N-nitro-L-arginine methyl ester NAME) and asymmetric dimethylarginine (ADMA). Various NO donors (at 100 mu M) did not stimulate cell growth. The furoxan CAS 1609 stimulated growth, decreased iNOS-mRNA expression and transiently increased haem oxygenase-1 (HO-1)-mRNA without releasing considerable amounts of NO. 1H-[1,2,4]Oxadiazolo[4,3,-alpha]quinoxalin-1-one (ODQ) attenuated the action of CAS 1609. Proliferation was stimulated by Co-protoporphyrin and tricarbonyldichlororuthenium(II) dimer (CORM-2). We conclude that CAS 1609 triggers hepatocyte mitosis most likely via direct, NO-independent induction of HO-1 expression, pointing to CO as a growth-promoting signal in the proliferation cascade in cultured hepatocytes. (C) 2010 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved
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