Peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor alpha (PPARalpha) ligands evoke a profound mitogenic response in rodent liver, and the aim of this study was to characterize the kinetics of induction of DNA synthesis. The CAR ligand, 1,4-bis[2-(3,5-dichoropyridyloxy)]benzene, caused induction of hepatocyte DNA synthesis within 48 h in 129S4/SvJae mice, but the potent PPARalpha ligand, ciprofibrate, induced hepatocyte DNA synthesis only after 3 or 4 days dosing; higher or lower doses did not hasten the DNA synthesis response. This contrasted with the rapid induction (24 h) reported by Styles et al., 1988, Carcinogenesis 9, 1647-1655. C57BL/6 and DBA/2J mice showed significant induction of DNA synthesis after 4, but not 2, days ciprofibrate treatment. Alderley Park and 129S4/SvJae mice dosed with methylclofenapate induced hepatocyte DNA synthesis at 4, but not 2, days after dosing and proved that inconsistency with prior work was not due to a difference in mouse strain or PPARalpha ligand. Ciprofibrate-induced liver DNA synthesis and growth was absent in PPARalpha-null mice and are PPARalpha dependent. In the Fisher344 rat, hepatocyte DNA synthesis was induced at 24 h after dosing, with a second peak at 48 h. Lobular localization of hepatocyte DNA synthesis showed preferential periportal induction of DNA synthesis in rat but panlobular zonation of hepatocyte DNA synthesis in mouse. These results characterize a markedly later hepatic induction of panlobular DNA synthesis by PPARalpha ligands in mouse, compared to rapid induction of periportal DNA synthesis in rat.
The mechanism of induction of hepatic DNA synthesis by PPARα agonists and other hepatic growth agents was investigated using transcriptomic approaches.
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