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1.
Biochim Biophys Acta ; 1832(5): 660-73, 2013 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23376114

ABSTRACT

Lipocalin-2 is expressed under pernicious conditions such as intoxication, infection, inflammation and other forms of cellular stress. Experimental liver injury induces rapid and sustained LCN2 production by injured hepatocytes. However, the precise biological function of LCN2 in liver is still unknown. In this study, LCN2(-/-) mice were exposed to short term application of CCl4, lipopolysaccharide and Concanavalin A, or subjected to bile duct ligation. Subsequent injuries were assessed by liver function analysis, qRT-PCR for chemokine and cytokine expression, liver tissue Western blot, histology and TUNEL assay. Serum LCN2 levels from patients suffering from liver disease were assessed and evaluated. Acute CCl4 intoxication showed increased liver damage in LCN2(-/-) mice indicated by higher levels of aminotransferases, and increased expression of inflammatory cytokines and chemokines such as IL-1ß, IL-6, TNF-α and MCP-1/CCL2, resulting in sustained activation of STAT1, STAT3 and JNK pathways. Hepatocytes of LCN2(-/-) mice showed lipid droplet accumulation and increased apoptosis. Hepatocyte apoptosis was confirmed in the Concanavalin A and lipopolysaccharide models. In chronic models (4weeks bile duct ligation or 8weeks CCl4 application), LCN2(-/-) mice showed slightly increased fibrosis compared to controls. Interestingly, serum LCN2 levels in diseased human livers were significantly higher compared to controls, but no differences were observed between cirrhotic and non-cirrhotic patients. Upregulation of LCN2 is a reliable indicator of liver damage and has significant hepato-protective effect in acute liver injury. LCN2 levels provide no correlation to the degree of liver fibrosis but show significant positive correlation to inflammation instead.


Subject(s)
Acute-Phase Proteins/metabolism , Homeostasis , Lipocalins/metabolism , Liver Diseases/metabolism , Liver/metabolism , Oncogene Proteins/metabolism , Acute Disease , Acute-Phase Proteins/genetics , Animals , Apoptosis , Bile Ducts/surgery , Blotting, Western , Carbon Tetrachloride/toxicity , Chemokines/genetics , Chemokines/metabolism , Concanavalin A/toxicity , Cytokines/genetics , Cytokines/metabolism , Gene Expression , Hepatocytes/metabolism , Hepatocytes/pathology , Humans , Immunohistochemistry , Ligation/adverse effects , Lipocalin-2 , Lipocalins/blood , Lipocalins/genetics , Lipopolysaccharides/toxicity , Liver/pathology , Liver Diseases/etiology , Liver Diseases/genetics , Mice , Mice, Inbred C57BL , Mice, Knockout , Oncogene Proteins/genetics , Proto-Oncogene Proteins/blood , Reverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain Reaction
2.
Gut ; 61(3): 416-26, 2012 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21813474

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: Monocyte chemoattractant protein-1 (MCP-1, CCL2), the primary ligand for chemokine receptor C-C chemokine receptor 2 (CCR2), is increased in livers of patients with non-alcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH) and murine models of steatohepatitis and fibrosis. It was recently shown that monocyte/macrophage infiltration into the liver upon injury is critically regulated by the CCL2/CCR2 axis and is functionally important for perpetuating hepatic inflammation and fibrogenesis. The structured L-enantiomeric RNA oligonucleotide mNOX-E36 (a so-called Spiegelmer) potently binds and inhibits murine MCP-1. Pharmacological inhibition of MCP-1 with mNOX-E36 was investigated in two murine models of chronic liver diseases. METHODS: Pharmacological inhibition of MCP-1 by thrice-weekly mNOX-E36 subcutaneously was tested in murine models of acute or chronic carbon tetrachloride (CCl(4))- and methionine-choline-deficient (MCD) diet-induced chronic hepatic injury in vivo. RESULTS: Antagonising MCP-1 by mNOX-E36 efficiently inhibited murine monocyte chemotaxis in vitro as well as migration of Gr1(+) (Ly6C(+)) blood monocytes into the liver upon acute toxic injury in vivo. In murine models of CCl(4)- and MCD diet-induced hepatic injury, the infiltration of macrophages into the liver was significantly decreased in anti-MCP-1-treated mice as found by fluorescence-activated cell sorting (FACS) analysis and immunohistochemistry. In line with lower levels of intrahepatic macrophages, proinflammatory cytokines (tumour necrosis factor α, interferon γ and interleukin 6) were significantly reduced in liver tissue. Overall fibrosis progression over 6 (CCl(4)) or 8 weeks (MCD diet) was not significantly altered by anti-MCP-1 treatment. However, upon MCD diet challenge a lower level of fatty liver degeneration (histology score, Oil red O staining, hepatic triglyceride content, lipogenesis genes) was detected in mNOX-E36-treated animals. mNOX-E36 also ameliorated hepatic steatosis upon therapeutic administration. CONCLUSIONS: These results demonstrate the successful pharmacological inhibition of hepatic monocyte/macrophage infiltration by blocking MCP-1 during chronic liver damage in two in vivo models. The associated ameliorated steatosis development suggests that inhibition of MCP-1 is an interesting novel approach for pharmacological treatment in liver inflammation and steatohepatitis.


Subject(s)
Aptamers, Nucleotide/pharmacology , Chemical and Drug Induced Liver Injury, Chronic/complications , Chemokine CCL2/antagonists & inhibitors , Fatty Liver/prevention & control , Macrophages/drug effects , Acute Disease , Animals , Aptamers, Nucleotide/therapeutic use , Bone Marrow Cells/drug effects , Bone Marrow Cells/physiology , Carbon Tetrachloride , Cells, Cultured , Chemical and Drug Induced Liver Injury/complications , Chemical and Drug Induced Liver Injury/drug therapy , Chemical and Drug Induced Liver Injury/pathology , Chemical and Drug Induced Liver Injury, Chronic/drug therapy , Chemical and Drug Induced Liver Injury, Chronic/pathology , Chemokine CCL2/physiology , Chemotaxis/drug effects , Cytokines/metabolism , Disease Progression , Drug Evaluation, Preclinical/methods , Fatty Liver/drug therapy , Fatty Liver/etiology , Liver/metabolism , Liver/pathology , Liver Cirrhosis, Experimental/etiology , Liver Cirrhosis, Experimental/prevention & control , Macrophages/physiology , Male , Mice , Mice, Inbred C57BL , Non-alcoholic Fatty Liver Disease
3.
Hepatology ; 52(5): 1769-82, 2010 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21038415

ABSTRACT

UNLABELLED: Chemokines modulate inflammatory responses that are prerequisites for organ fibrosis upon liver injury. Monocyte-derived hepatic macrophages are critical for the development, maintenance, and resolution of hepatic fibrosis. The specific role of monocyte-associated chemokine (C-X3-C motif) receptor 1 (CX3CR1) and its cognate ligand fractalkine [chemokine (C-X3-C motif) ligand 1)] in liver inflammation and fibrosis is currently unknown. We examined 169 patients with chronic liver diseases and 84 healthy controls; we found that CX3CL1 is significantly up-regulated in the circulation upon disease progression, whereas CX3CR1 is down-regulated intrahepatically in patients with advanced liver fibrosis or cirrhosis. To analyze the functional relevance of this pathway, two models of experimental liver fibrosis were applied to wild-type (WT) and CX3CR1-deficient mice. Fractalkine expression was induced upon liver injury in mice, primarily in hepatocytes and hepatic stellate cells. CX3CR1(-/-) animals developed greater hepatic fibrosis than WT animals with carbon tetrachloride-induced and bile duct ligation-induced fibrosis. CX3CR1(-/-) mice displayed significantly increased numbers of monocyte-derived macrophages within the injured liver. Chimeric animals that underwent bone marrow transplantation revealed that CX3CR1 restricts hepatic fibrosis progression and monocyte accumulation through mechanisms exerted by infiltrating immune cells. In the absence of CX3CR1, intrahepatic monocytes develop preferentially into proinflammatory tumor necrosis factor-producing and inducible nitric oxide synthase-producing macrophages. CX3CR1 represents an essential survival signal for hepatic monocyte-derived macrophages by activating antiapoptotic bcl2 expression. Monocytes/macrophages lacking CX3CR1 undergo increased cell death after liver injury, which then perpetuates inflammation, promotes prolonged inflammatory monocyte infiltration into the liver, and results in enhanced liver fibrosis. CONCLUSION: CX3CR1 limits liver fibrosis in vivo by controlling the differentiation and survival of intrahepatic monocytes. The opposing regulation of CX3CR1 and fractalkine in patients suggests that pharmacological augmentation of this pathway may represent a possible therapeutic antifibrotic strategy.


Subject(s)
Cell Differentiation/drug effects , Leukocytes/cytology , Liver Cirrhosis/prevention & control , Liver/cytology , Monocytes/cytology , Receptors, Chemokine/therapeutic use , Actins/genetics , Alanine Transaminase/genetics , Animals , Bone Marrow Transplantation , CX3C Chemokine Receptor 1 , Crosses, Genetic , Flow Cytometry , Glyceraldehyde-3-Phosphate Dehydrogenases/genetics , Humans , Leukocytes/physiology , Liver/drug effects , Mice , Mice, Inbred C57BL , Mice, Knockout , Monocytes/drug effects , Polymerase Chain Reaction , Receptors, Chemokine/deficiency
4.
Hepatology ; 50(1): 261-74, 2009 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19554540

ABSTRACT

UNLABELLED: In addition to liver-resident Kupffer cells, infiltrating immune cells have recently been linked to the development of liver fibrosis. Blood monocytes are circulating precursors of tissue macrophages and can be divided into two functionally distinct subpopulations in mice: Gr1(hi) (Ly6C(hi)) and Gr1(lo) (Ly6C(lo)) monocytes. The role of these monocyte subsets in hepatic fibrosis and the mechanisms of their differential recruitment into the injured liver are unknown. We therefore characterized subpopulations of infiltrating monocytes in acute and chronic carbon tetrachloride (CCl(4))-induced liver injury in mice using flow cytometry and immunohistochemistry. Inflammatory Gr1(hi) but not Gr1(lo) monocytes are massively recruited into the liver upon toxic injury constituting an up to 10-fold increase in CD11b(+)F4/80(+) intrahepatic macrophages. Comparing wild-type with C-C chemokine receptor (CCR2)-deficient and CCR2/CCR6-deficient mice revealed that CCR2 critically controls intrahepatic Gr1(hi) monocyte accumulation by mediating their egress from bone marrow. During chronic liver damage, intrahepatic CD11b(+)F4/80(+)Gr1(+) monocyte-derived cells differentiate preferentially into inducible nitric oxide synthase-producing macrophages exerting proinflammatory and profibrogenic actions, such as promoting hepatic stellate cell (HSC) activation, T helper 1-T cell differentiation and transforming growth factor beta (TGF-beta) release. Impaired monocyte subset recruitment in Ccr2(-/-) and Ccr2(-/-)Ccr6(-/-) mice results in reduced HSC activation and diminished liver fibrosis. Moreover, adoptively transferred Gr1(hi) monocytes traffic into the injured liver and promote fibrosis progression in wild-type and Ccr2(-/-)Ccr6(-/-) mice, which are otherwise protected from hepatic fibrosis. Intrahepatic CD11b(+)F4/80(+)Gr1(+) monocyte-derived macrophages purified from CCl(4)-treated animals, but not naïve bone marrow monocytes or control lymphocytes, directly activate HSCs in a TGF-beta-dependent manner in vitro. CONCLUSION: Inflammatory Gr1(+) monocytes, recruited into the injured liver via CCR2-dependent bone marrow egress, promote the progression of liver fibrosis. Thus, they may represent an interesting novel target for antifibrotic strategies.


Subject(s)
Leukocytes, Mononuclear/immunology , Liver Cirrhosis/etiology , Animals , Antigens, Ly/immunology , Liver Cirrhosis/immunology , Mice , Mice, Inbred C57BL
5.
Expert Rev Gastroenterol Hepatol ; 2(2): 233-42, 2008 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19072358

ABSTRACT

The infiltration of various immune cell populations, including monocytes/macrophages, natural killer (NK), NKT cells and T cells, is a central pathogenic feature following acute- and chronic liver injury. Chemotactic cytokines, chemokines, are small-protein mediators that direct the migration of immune cells. Several hepatic cell populations, including hepatocytes, Kupffer cells, sinusoidal endothelial cells and hepatic stellate cells, can secrete chemokines upon activation. Samples from liver-disease patients and animal models of experimental injury highlight multiple activated chemokine pathways during initiation, maintenance or resolution of liver pathology. Monocyte chemoattractant protein-1 (Chemokine [C-C motif] ligand [CCL]2) can attract monocytes via CCR2. Infiltrating monocytes probably have functions in both disease progression and resolution of damage. RANTES (CCL5) may promote infiltration of NK (via CCR1) and T cells (via CCR5). Dissecting the exact functional contribution of immune cell subsets, chemokines and chemokine-receptor pathways in liver injury will hopefully identify novel targets for the treatment of acute liver failure, liver fibrosis or cirrhosis.


Subject(s)
Chemokines/immunology , Leukocytes, Mononuclear/immunology , Liver Diseases/immunology , Acute Disease , Animals , Chronic Disease , Humans , Leukocytes, Mononuclear/pathology , Liver Diseases/pathology
6.
Proteins ; 63(3): 671-80, 2006 May 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16425288

ABSTRACT

Several protein cascades, including signaling, cytoskeletal, chaperones, metabolic, and antioxidant proteins, have been shown to be involved in the process of neuronal differentiation (ND) of neuroblastoma cell lines. No systematic approach to detect hitherto unknown and unnamed proteins or structures that have been predicted upon nucleic acid sequences in ND has been published so far. We therefore decided to screen hypothetical protein (HP) expression by protein profiling. Two-dimensional gel electrophoresis with subsequent matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization-time of flight mass spectrometry (MALDI-TOF/TOF) identification was used for expression analysis of undifferentiated and dimethylsulfoxide-induced neuronally differentiated N1E-115 cells. We unambiguously identified six HPs: Q8C520, Q99LF4, Q9CXS1, Q9DAF8, Q91WT0, and Q8C5G2. A prefoldin domain in Q91WT0, a t-SNARE domain in Q9CXS1, and a bromodomain were observed in Q8C5G2. For the three remaining proteins, no putative function using Pfam, BLOCKS, PROSITE, PRINTS, InterPro, Superfamily, CoPS, and ExPASy could be assigned. While two proteins were present in both cell lines, Q9CXS1 was switched off (i.e., undetectably low) in differentiated cells only, and Q9DAF8, Q91WT0, and Q8C5G2 were switched on in differentiated cells exclusively. Herein, using a proteomic approach suitable for screening and identification of HP, we present HP structures that have been only predicted so far based upon nucleic acid sequences. The four differentially regulated HPs may play a putative role in the process of ND.


Subject(s)
Gene Expression Regulation, Neoplastic , Neoplasm Proteins/biosynthesis , Neoplasm Proteins/genetics , Neuroblastoma/genetics , Neuroblastoma/metabolism , Amino Acid Sequence , Animals , Cell Differentiation/genetics , Cell Line, Tumor , Mice , Molecular Sequence Data
7.
Neurochem Res ; 30(3): 333-48, 2005 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16018577

ABSTRACT

No systematic searches for differential expression of signaling proteins (SP) in undifferentiated vs. differentiated cell lineages were published and herein we used protein profiling for this purpose. The NIE-115 cell line was cultivated and an aliquot was differentiated with dimethylsulfoxide (DMSO), that is known to lead to a neuronal phenotype. Cell lysates were prepared, run on two-dimensional gel electrophoresis followed by MALDI-TOF-TOF identification of proteins and maps of identified SPs were generated. Seven SPs were comparable, 27 SPs: GTP-binding/Ras-related proteins, kinases, growth factors, calcium binding proteins, phosphatase-related proteins were observed in differentiated NIE-115 cells and eight SPs of the groups mentioned above were observed in undifferentiated cells only. Switching-on/off of several individual SPs from different signaling cascades during the differentiation process is a key to understand mechanisms involved. The findings reported herein are challenging in vitro and in vivo studies to confirm a functional role for deranged SPs.


Subject(s)
Brain Neoplasms/pathology , Neuroblastoma/pathology , Signal Transduction/physiology , Cell Differentiation/physiology , Cell Line, Tumor , Electrophoresis, Gel, Two-Dimensional , Humans , Spectrometry, Mass, Matrix-Assisted Laser Desorption-Ionization
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