6 research outputs found
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PACAP neuropeptide promotes Hepatocellular Protection via CREB-KLF4 dependent autophagy in mouse liver Ischemia Reperfusion Injury.
Organ ischemia reperfusion injury (IRI), associated with acute hepatocyte death, remains an unresolved problem in clinical orthotopic liver transplantation (OLT). Autophagy, an intracellular self-digesting progress, is responsible for cell reprograming required to regain post-stress homeostasis. Methods: Here, we analyzed the cytoprotective mechanism of pituitary adenylate cyclase-activating polypeptide (PACAP)-promoted hepatocellular autophagy in a clinically relevant mouse model of extended hepatic cold storage (4 °C UW solution for 20 h) followed by syngeneic OLT. Results: In contrast to 41.7% of liver graft failure by day 7 post-transplant in control group, PACAP treatment significantly improved graft survival (91.7% by day 14), and promoted autophagy-associated regeneration programs in OLT. In parallel in vitro studies, PACAP-enhanced autophagy ameliorated cellular damage (LDH/ALT levels), and diminished necrosis in H2O2-stressed primary hepatocytes. Interestingly, PACAP not only induced nuclear cAMP response element-binding protein (CREB), but also triggered reprogramming factor Kruppel-like factor 4 (KLF4) expression in IR-stressed OLT. Indeed, CREB inhibition attenuated hepatic autophagy and recreated hepatocellular injury in otherwise PACAP-protected livers. Furthermore, CREB inhibition suppressed PACAP-induced KLF4 expression, whereas KLF4 blockade abolished PACAP-promoted autophagy and neutralized PACAP-mediated hepatoprotection both in vivo and in vitro. Conclusion: Current study documents the essential neural regulation of PACAP-promoted autophagy in hepatocellular homeostasis in OLT, which provides the emerging therapeutic principle to combat hepatic IRI in OLT
PACAP neuropeptide promotes Hepatocellular Protection via CREB-KLF4 dependent autophagy in mouse liver Ischemia Reperfusion Injury
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Inhibition of Cyclin-dependent Kinase 2 Signaling Prevents Liver Ischemia and Reperfusion Injury
BackgroundLiver ischemia and reperfusion injury (IRI) is a major complication of liver transplant, hepatectomy, and hemorrhagic shock. The cyclin-dependent kinase 2 (CDK2) acts as a pivotal regulator of cell cycle and proliferation.MethodsThis study evaluated the modulation and therapeutic potential of CDK2 inhibition in a mouse model of partial liver warm IRI.ResultsLiver IR-triggered intrinsic CDK2 expression, peaking by 0.5 hour of reperfusion and maintaining a high-level throughout 1 to 24 hours. Roscovitine, a specific CDK2 inhibitor, prevented liver IR-mediated damage with abolished serum alanine aminotransferase levels and reserved liver pathology. CDK2 inhibition-mediated liver protection was accompanied by decreased macrophage/neutrophil infiltration, diminished hepatocyte apoptosis, abolished toll like receptor 4 signaling and downstream gene inductions (C-X-C motif ligand-10, Tumor necrosis factor-α, interleukin-1β, and interleukin-6), yet augmented interleukin-10 expression. In vitro, CDK2 inhibition by Roscovitine suppressed macrophage TLR4 activation and further depressed downstream inflammatory signaling (myeloid differentiation factor 88, interferon regulatory transcription factor 3, p38, c-Jun N-terminal kinase, and extracellular-regulated kinase).ConclusionsOur novel findings revealed the critical role of CDK2 in hepatic cytoprotection and homeostasis against liver IRI. As CDK2 inhibition regulated local immune response and prevented hepatocyte death, this study provided the evidence for new treatment approaches to combat IRI in liver transplant
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Activation of YAP attenuates hepatic damage and fibrosis in liver ischemia-reperfusion injury.
Background & aimsHepatic ischemia-reperfusion injury (IRI) is a major complication of hemorrhagic shock, liver resection and transplantation. YAP, a key downstream effector of the Hippo pathway, is essential for determining cell fate and maintaining homeostasis in the liver. We aimed to elucidate its role in IRI.MethodsThe role of YAP/Hippo signaling was systematically studied in biopsy specimens from 60 patients after orthotopic liver transplantation (OLT), and in a mouse model of liver warm IRI. Human biopsy specimens were collected after 2-10 h of cold storage and 3 h post-reperfusion, before being screened by western blot. In the mouse model, the role of YAP was probed by activating or inhibiting YAP prior to ischemia-reperfusion.ResultsIn human biopsies, high post-OLT YAP expression was correlated with well-preserved histology and improved hepatocellular function at postoperative day 1-7. In mice, the ischemia insult (90 min) triggered intrinsic hepatic YAP expression, which peaked at 1-6 h of reperfusion. Activation of YAP protected the liver against IR-stress, by promoting regenerative and anti-oxidative gene induction, while diminishing oxidative stress, necrosis/apoptosis and the innate inflammatory response. Inhibition of YAP aggravated hepatic IRI and suppressed repair/anti-oxidative genes. In mouse hepatocyte cultures, activating YAP prevented hypoxia-reoxygenation induced stress. Interestingly, YAP activation suppressed extracellular matrix synthesis and diminished hepatic stellate cell (HSC) activation, whereas YAP inhibition significantly delayed hepatic repair, potentiated HSC activation, and enhanced liver fibrosis at 7 days post-IRI. Notably, YAP activation failed to protect Nrf2-deficient livers against IR-mediated damage, leading to extensive fibrosis.ConclusionOur novel findings document the crucial role of YAP in IR-mediated hepatocellular damage and liver fibrogenesis, providing evidence of a potential therapeutic target for the management of sterile liver inflammation in transplant recipients.Lay summaryIn the clinical arm, graft YAP expression negatively correlated with liver function and tissue damage after human liver transplantation. YAP activation attenuated hepatocellular oxidative stress and diminished the innate immune response in mouse livers following ischemia-reperfusion injury. In the mouse model, YAP inhibited hepatic stellate cell activation, and abolished injury-mediated fibrogenesis up to 7 days after the ischemic insult
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PACAP neuropeptide promotes Hepatocellular Protection via CREB-KLF4 dependent autophagy in mouse liver Ischemia Reperfusion Injury.
Organ ischemia reperfusion injury (IRI), associated with acute hepatocyte death, remains an unresolved problem in clinical orthotopic liver transplantation (OLT). Autophagy, an intracellular self-digesting progress, is responsible for cell reprograming required to regain post-stress homeostasis. Methods: Here, we analyzed the cytoprotective mechanism of pituitary adenylate cyclase-activating polypeptide (PACAP)-promoted hepatocellular autophagy in a clinically relevant mouse model of extended hepatic cold storage (4 °C UW solution for 20 h) followed by syngeneic OLT. Results: In contrast to 41.7% of liver graft failure by day 7 post-transplant in control group, PACAP treatment significantly improved graft survival (91.7% by day 14), and promoted autophagy-associated regeneration programs in OLT. In parallel in vitro studies, PACAP-enhanced autophagy ameliorated cellular damage (LDH/ALT levels), and diminished necrosis in H2O2-stressed primary hepatocytes. Interestingly, PACAP not only induced nuclear cAMP response element-binding protein (CREB), but also triggered reprogramming factor Kruppel-like factor 4 (KLF4) expression in IR-stressed OLT. Indeed, CREB inhibition attenuated hepatic autophagy and recreated hepatocellular injury in otherwise PACAP-protected livers. Furthermore, CREB inhibition suppressed PACAP-induced KLF4 expression, whereas KLF4 blockade abolished PACAP-promoted autophagy and neutralized PACAP-mediated hepatoprotection both in vivo and in vitro. Conclusion: Current study documents the essential neural regulation of PACAP-promoted autophagy in hepatocellular homeostasis in OLT, which provides the emerging therapeutic principle to combat hepatic IRI in OLT
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Pituitary Adenylate Cyclase-Activating Polypeptides Prevent Hepatocyte Damage by Promoting Yes-associated Protein in Liver Ischemia/Reperfusion Injury.
BACKGROUND:Hepatic ischemia-reperfusion injury (IRI) is a severe complication in liver transplantation, hepatectomy and hemorrhagic shock. As neuropeptides transmit the regulatory signal between nervous-immune systems communication, our previous study documented that pituitary adenylate cyclase-activating polypeptides (PACAP) depressed hepatic TLR4 immune response in liver IRI. METHODS:Here, we focused on how PACAP suppressed hepatocellular damage and enhanced hepatocyte regeneration in a murine model of partial liver warm IRI. RESULTS:Yes-associated protein (YAP), a cellular modulator of tissue regeneration, was readily induced in WT IR-livers. As its induction was failed in PACAP-deficient livers, PACAP supplement enhanced YAP expression in WT mouse, promoted its nuclear translocation and downstream anti-oxidative/regenerative genes expression both in vivo and in vitro. Further, verteporfin (VP), a YAP transcriptional inhibitor, abolished PACAP-mediated hepatoprotection significantly. Meanwhile, blockade of PKA-CREB signaling recreated liver damage in PACAP-protected liver, as well as impeded stimulation on YAP and its downstream gene expressions. Consistently, inhibition of PKA-CREB decreased PACAP promoted YAP expression in primary hepatocytes culture, and made them vulnerable to H2O2 stress in vitro. In addition, lysophosphatidic acid (LPA), another Hippo pathway inhibitor, failed to affect PACAP-mediated hepatoprotection or hepatocellular YAP induction. This implies that PACAP regulated YAP through PKA-CREB pathway at the transcriptional level rather than canonical hippo pathway. CONCLUSION:Our study discovered the neural modulation of PACAP-YAP axis in hepatic cytoprotection and homeostasis in liver IRI. These reveal a novel insight of neuropeptide PACAP in combating liver IRI in clinical patients