Abstract. Despite extensive efforts, little progress has been made in identifying the factors that induce hepatic fibrosis. Transforming growth factor-/3 (TGF-/3) has been shown to enhance collagen production, therefore its role in hepatic fibrosis was investigated. Treatment of cultured hepatic ceils with TGF-31 increased type I procollagen mRNA levels 13-fold due to posttranscriptional gene regulation. When two animal models of hepatic fibrosis, murine schistosomiasis and CC14-treated rats, were examined, they both exhibited increased levels of TGF-31 gene expression at times that somewhat preceded the increase in collagen synthesis. In contrast, in murine schistosomiasis, mRNA levels of tumor necrosis factor and interleukin-I peaked early in the fibrogenic process. Immunohistochemical analysis showed TGF-31 to be present in normal mouse liver and to be markedly increased in mice infected with schistosomiasis. TGF-31 appeared in the'hepatic parenchyma, primarily in hepatocytes. These findings strongly suggest a role for TGF-31 in a pathophysiological state.
An early feature in the development of adipocytes from fibroblast-like precursor cells is the biogenesis of an extracellular basement membrane (Napolitano, 1963; Kuri-Harcuch et al., 1984). Interactions between components of the basement membrane (e.g., collagens) and the surfaces of differentiating adipocytes are thought to regulate subsequent phases of the developmental program. Since fibroblasts principally secrete type I and III collagens whereas type IV collagen is abundant in basement membrane, it appears that a switch in collagen gene expression is a key element in adipocyte differentiation. Little is known about the mechanisms underlying differentiation-dependent changes in collagen expression or the effects of the potent lipolytic cytokine TNF-alpha on collagen mRNA accumulation in preadipocytes and adipocytes. In this study, 3T3-L1 preadipocytes were found to express mRNAs encoding type I, III, and IV procollagens. When 3T3-L1 cells were stimulated to differentiate into adipocytes, the relative concentrations of type I and type III procollagen mRNAs declined by 80-90%. Parallel decreases in the rates of transcription of the procollagen I and procollagen III genes appear to account for the diminished levels of these mRNAs. In contrast, the relative rate of transcription of the procollagen IV gene increased 2.6-fold during adipocyte development. As a consequence, the abundance of type IV procollagen transcripts was elevated in adipocytes. Tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF-alpha) is a cytokine that stimulates lipolysis, an apparent "dedifferentiation" of adipocytes, and inhibits transcription of certain adipocyte-specific genes. The effects of TNF-alpha on collagen mRNA levels were dependent upon the state of differentiation of 3T3-L1 cells.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
Since interferons have been shown to affect the synthesis of matrix proteins such as collagen in several in vitro systems, the potential role of gamma-interferon in inhibiting hepatic fibrosis was investigated. Hepatic cells, consisting primarily of hepatocytes, were treated with recombinant gamma-interferon for 24 hr. Northern blot hybridization showed that gamma-interferon treatment caused a profound decrease in pro-alpha 2(I)collagen mRNA levels but an increase in beta-actin mRNA content. The effects of gamma-interferon were then studied in an in vivo model of hepatic fibrogenesis, murine schistosomiasis. Schistosoma-infected mice were treated with daily i.m. injections of gamma-interferon for a 4-week period starting 4 weeks after the initial infection. gamma-Interferon treatment decreased collagen deposition as determined by histologic evaluation and measurement of total liver collagen content. Northern blots showed Types I and III procollagen mRNA levels for treated, infected animals to be only 32 and 29% that of infected controls, but beta-actin mRNA levels were significantly elevated. These results indicate a potential role for gamma-interferon as an antifibrogenic agent in vivo.
During liver regeneration induced by CCl4 administration to rats, changes in the relative transcription rates of albumin and alpha-fetoprotein genes have been measured in conjunction with other liver-specific and general cellular function genes. Within 24 h following CCl4 administration, albumin gene transcription decreases by 85%, whereas alpha-fetoprotein transcription increases from undetectable levels to 50% of that observed for albumin. These changes precede maximal [3H]thymidine incorporation into DNA which peaks at 48 h. Other genes related to liver-specific functions, such as ligandin, alpha 1-antitrypsin, and cytochrome P-450's, as well as general cellular genes pro alpha 1- and pro alpha 2-collagen, beta-actin, and alpha-tubulin, respond in kinetic patterns often distinct from each other and from albumin and alpha-fetoprotein. Changes in the steady-state levels of albumin and alpha-fetoprotein mRNA correlate with changes in transcription, but there is a lag in alpha-fetoprotein mRNA accumulation, which peaks at 72 h following CCl4 administration. These studies indicate that reciprocal changes in albumin and alpha-fetoprotein gene transcription occur during CCl4-induced liver regeneration, leading to changes in the level of these specific mRNAs. These changes precede DNA synthesis and would appear to represent an alteration in differentiated function of hepatocytes in conjunction with the liver regenerative process.
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