학술논문

Regulation of hepatic connexins in cholestasis: possible involvement of Kupffer cells and inflammatory mediators
Document Type
Abstract
Source
The American Journal of Physiology. June, 2002, Vol. 282 Issue 6, pG991, 11 p.
Subject
Cholestasis -- Physiological aspects
Liver cells -- Physiological aspects
Inflammation -- Mediators
Biological sciences
Language
ISSN
0002-9513
Abstract
Hepatocyte gap junction proteins, connexins (Cxs) 26 and 32, are downregulated during obstructive cholestasis (OC) and lipopolysaccharide hepatocellular cholestasis (LPS-HC). We investigated rat hepatic Cxs during ethynylestradiol hepatocellular cholestasis (EE-HC) and choledochocaval fistula (CCF) and compared them with OC and LPS-HC. Levels (immunoblotting) and cellular distribution (immunofluorescence) of Cx26, -32, and -43, as well as macrophage infiltration, were studied in livers of rats under each condition. Cx26 and -32 were reduced in LPS-HC, OC, and CCF. However, in EE-HC, Cx26 did not change and Cx32 was increased. Prominent inflammation occurred in LPS-HC, OC, and CCF, which was associated with increased levels of Cx43 in LPS-HC and OC but not CCF. No inflammation nor changes in Cx43 levels occurred during EE-HC. In cultured hepatocytes, dye coupling was reduced by tumor necrosis factor-[alpha] and interleukins-1[beta] and -6, whereas reduction induced by LPS required coculture with Kupffer cells. Thus hepatocyte gap junctions are down-regulated in forms of cholestasis associated with inflammation, and reduced intercellular communication might be induced in part by proinflammatory mediators. obstructive cholestasis; hepatocellular cholestasis; cytokines; macrophages.

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