First Author | Rudnick DA | Year | 2004 |
Journal | Hepatology | Volume | 39 |
Issue | 4 | Pages | 1048-55 |
PubMed ID | 15057909 | Mgi Jnum | J:90211 |
Mgi Id | MGI:3042691 | Doi | 10.1002/hep.20118 |
Citation | Rudnick DA, et al. (2004) Analyses of hepatocellular proliferation in a mouse model of alpha-1-antitrypsin deficiency. Hepatology 39(4):1048-55 |
abstractText | alpha-1-Antitrypsin (alpha1-AT) deficiency is the most common cause of metabolic pediatric liver disease. Hepatocellular injury is caused by toxicity of the mutant alpha-1-antitrypsin Z (alpha1-ATZ) molecule retained within hepatocytes. In these studies, we used the PiZ transgenic mouse model of alpha1-AT deficiency to examine hepatocellular proliferation in response to chronic liver injury resulting from this metabolic disease. The results showed increased hepatocellular proliferation and caspase 9 activation in male PiZ mice compared with female PiZ and wild-type mice. Hepatic alpha1-AT mRNA and protein expression also were increased in male PiZ mice, suggesting that greater hepatocellular proliferation and caspase activation in males results from increased hepatotoxicity associated with greater intracellular alpha1-ATZ accumulation. Testosterone treatment of female PiZ mice increased alpha1-ATZ expression and hepatocellular proliferation to a level comparable with that in males. In PiZ mice, hepatocytes devoid of intracellular alpha1-AT globules had a proliferative advantage compared with globule-containing hepatocytes. However, this advantage is relative because both globule-containing and globule-devoid hepatocytes exhibited comparable proliferation after partial hepatectomy. In conclusion, these data indicate that intracellular retention of mutant alpha1-ATZ is associated with a regenerative stimulus leading to increased hepatocellular proliferation, that gender-specific signals influence the degree of alpha1-AT expression and associated hepatic injury, and that hepatocytes devoid of alpha1-ATZ have a proliferative advantage over cells that accumulate the mutant protein. This selective proliferation suggests that hepatocellular transplantation may be applicable for treatment of this and other slowly progressive metabolic liver diseases. |