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Publication : Hydrogen peroxide and redox modulation sensitize primary mouse hepatocytes to TNF-induced apoptosis.

First Author  Han D Year  2006
Journal  Free Radic Biol Med Volume  41
Issue  4 Pages  627-39
PubMed ID  16863996 Mgi Jnum  J:111277
Mgi Id  MGI:3653548 Doi  10.1016/j.freeradbiomed.2006.05.002
Citation  Han D, et al. (2006) Hydrogen peroxide and redox modulation sensitize primary mouse hepatocytes to TNF-induced apoptosis. Free Radic Biol Med 41(4):627-39
abstractText  Tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF) plays an important role in mediating hepatocyte injury in various liver pathologies. TNF treatment alone does not cause the death of primary cultured hepatocytes, suggesting other factors are necessary to mediate TNF-induced injury. In this work the question of whether reactive oxygen species can sensitize primary cultured hepatocytes to TNF-induced apoptosis and necrosis was investigated. Sublethal levels of H(2)O(2), either as bolus doses or steady-state levels generated by glucose oxidase, were found to sensitize cultured hepatocytes to TNF-induced apoptosis. High levels of H(2)O(2) also triggered necrosis in hepatocytes regardless of whether TNF was present. Similarly, antimycin, a complex III inhibitor that increases reactive oxygen species generation from mitochondria, sensitized hepatocytes to TNF-induced apoptosis at low doses but caused necrosis at high doses. Redox changes seem to be important in sensitizing primary hepatocytes, because diamide, a thiol-oxidizing agent, and 1,3-bis(2-chloroethyl)-1-nitrosourea (BCNU), an inhibitor of GSSG reductase, also increased TNF-induced apoptosis in cultured primary hepatocytes at sublethal doses. High doses of diamide and BCNU predominantly triggered necrotic cell death. Agents that sensitized hepatocytes to TNF-induced apoptosis-H(2)O(2), antimycin, diamide, BCNU-all caused a dramatic fall in the GSH/GSSG ratio. These redox alterations were found to inhibit TNF-induced IkappaB-alpha phosphorylation and NF-kappaB translocation to the nucleus, thus presumably inhibiting expression of genes necessary to inhibit the cytotoxic effects of TNF. Taken together, these results suggest that oxidation of the intracellular environment of hepatocytes by reactive oxygen species or redox-modulating agents interferes with NF-kappaB signaling pathways to sensitize hepatocytes to TNF-induced apoptosis. The TNF-induced apoptosis seems to occur only in a certain redox range-in which redox changes can inhibit NF-kappaB activity but not completely inhibit caspase activity. The implication for liver disease is that concomitant TNF exposure and reactive oxygen species, either extrinsically generated (e.g., nonparenchymal or inflammatory cells) or intrinsically generated in hepatocytes (e.g., mitochondria), may act in concert to promote apoptosis and liver injury.
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