Acetaminophen (AAP) overdose can cause severe liver injury and liver failure in experimental animals and humans. Recently, several authors proposed that apoptosis might be a major mechanism of cell death after AAP treatment. To address this controversial issue, we evaluated a detailed time course of liver injury after AAP (300 mg/kg) in fasted C3Heb/FeJ mice. Apoptotic hepatocytes were quantified in H&E-stained liver sections using morphologic criteria (cell shrinkage, chromatin condensation and margination, and apoptotic bodies). The number of apoptotic hepatocytes remained at baseline (0.2 +/- 0.1 cells/10 high-power fields [HPF]) up to 2 h after AAP administration. However, between 3 and 24 h, apoptotic cell death increased significantly, e.g., 6.3 +/- 0.8 cells/10 HPF at 6 h. Despite the increase in the number of hepatocytes meeting the morphological criteria of apoptosis, this cell fraction remained well below 1% of all parenchymal cells. No evidence for caspase-3 processing or increase in enzyme activity was detected at any time. These results were compared to the overall percent of necrotic cells in liver sections. Confluent areas of centrilobular necrosis were estimated to involve 40-60% of all hepatocytes between 3 and 24 h after AAP administration. These numbers correlated with the increase in plasma alanine aminotransferase activities, which reached a peak level of 5900 +/- 1350 U/l at 24 h. A similar result was obtained with higher doses of AAP and with the use of fed animals. Thus, oncotic necrosis and not apoptosis is the principal mechanism of liver-cell death after AAP overdose in vivo.
Acetaminophen hepatotoxicity is the leading cause of drug-induced liver failure. Despite substantial efforts in the past, the mechanisms of acetaminophen-induced liver cell injury are still incompletely understood. Recent advances suggest that reactive metabolite formation, glutathione depletion, and alkylation of proteins, especially mitochondrial proteins, are critical initiating events for the toxicity. Bcl-2 family members Bax and Bid then form pores in the outer mitochondrial membrane and release intermembrane proteins, e.g., apoptosis-inducing factor (AIF) and endonuclease G, which then translocate to the nucleus and initiate chromatin condensation and DNA fragmentation, respectively. Mitochondrial dysfunction, due to covalent binding, leads to formation of reactive oxygen and peroxynitrite, which trigger the membrane permeability transition and the collapse of the mitochondrial membrane potential. In addition to the diminishing capacity to synthesize ATP, endonuclease G and AIF are further released. Endonuclease G, together with an activated nuclear Ca2+,Mg2+-dependent endonuclease, cause DNA degradation, thereby preventing cell recovery and regeneration. Disruption of the Ca2+ homeostasis also leads to activation of intracellular proteases, e.g., calpains, which can proteolytically cleave structural proteins. Thus, multiple events including massive mitochondrial dysfunction and ATP depletion, extensive DNA fragmentation, and modification of intracellular proteins contribute to the development of oncotic necrotic cell death in the liver after acetaminophen overdose. Based on the recognition of the temporal sequence and interdependency of these mechanisms, it appears most promising to therapeutically target either the initiating event (metabolic activation) or the central propagating event (mitochondrial dysfunction and peroxynitrite formation) to prevent acetaminophen-induced liver cell death.
Acetaminophen (APAP) hepatotoxicity because of overdose is the most frequent cause of acute liver failure in the western world. Metabolic activation of APAP and protein adduct formation, mitochondrial dysfunction, oxidant stress, peroxynitrite formation and nuclear DNA fragmentation are critical intracellular events in hepatocytes. However, the early cell necrosis causes the release of a number of mediators such as high-mobility group box 1 protein, DNA fragments, heat shock proteins (HSPs) and others (collectively named damage-associated molecular patterns), which can be recognized by toll-like receptors on macrophages, and leads to their activation with cytokine and chemokine formation. Although pro-inflammatory mediators recruit inflammatory cells (neutrophils, monocytes) into the liver, neither the infiltrating cells nor the activated resident macrophages cause any direct cytotoxicity. In contrast, pro- and anti-inflammatory cytokines and chemokines can directly promote intracellular injury mechanisms by inducing nitric oxide synthase or inhibit cell death mechanisms by the expression of acute-phase proteins (HSPs, heme oxygenase-1) and promote hepatocyte proliferation. In addition, the newly recruited macrophages (M2) and potentially neutrophils are involved in the removal of necrotic cell debris in preparation for tissue repair and resolution of the inflammatory response. Thus, as discussed in detail in this review, the preponderance of experimental evidence suggests that the extensive sterile inflammatory response during APAP hepatotoxicity is predominantly beneficial by limiting the formation and the impact of pro-inflammatory mediators and by promoting tissue repair.
Intracellular sources of peroxynitrite formation and potential targets for this powerful oxidant and nitrating agent have not been identified after acetaminophen (AAP) overdose. Therefore, we tested the hypothesis that peroxynitrite generated in mitochondria may be responsible for mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) and nuclear DNA (nDNA) damage. C3Heb/FeJ mice were treated with 300 mg/kg AAP and monitored for up to 12 h. Loss of mtDNA (assayed by slot blot hybridization) and substantial nDNA fragmentation (evaluated by anti-histone enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay, terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase dUTP nick-end labeling assay, and agarose gel electrophoresis) were observed as early as 3 h after AAP overdose. Analysis of nitrotyrosine protein adducts in subcellular fractions established that peroxynitrite was generated predominantly in mitochondria beginning at 1 h after AAP injection. Delayed treatment with a bolus dose of glutathione (GSH) accelerated the recovery of mitochondrial glutathione, which then effectively scavenged peroxynitrite. However, mtDNA loss was only partially prevented. Despite the absence of nitrotyrosine adducts in the nucleus after AAP overdose, nDNA damage was almost completely eliminated with GSH administration. A direct comparison of nDNA damage after AAP overdose with nDNA fragmentation during tumor necrosis factor receptor-mediated apoptosis showed similar DNA ladders on agarose gels but quantitatively different results in three other assays. We conclude that peroxynitrite may be partially responsible for mtDNA loss but is not directly involved in nDNA damage. In contrast, nDNA fragmentation after AAP overdose is not caused by caspase-activated DNase but most likely by other intracellular DNase(s), whose activation is dependent on the mitochondrial oxidant stress and peroxynitrite formation.
Obstruction of the common bile duct in a variety of clinical settings leads to cholestatic liver injury. An important aspect of this injury is hepatic inflammation, with neutrophils as the prominent cell type involved. However, the pathophysiologic role of the infiltrating neutrophils during cholestatic liver injury remains unclear. Therefore, we tested the hypothesis that neutrophils contribute to the overall pathophysiology by using bile duct-ligated (BDL) wild-type animals and mice deficient in the  2 integrin CD18. In wild-type animals, neutrophils were activated systemically as indicated by the increased expression of Mac-1 (CD11b/CD18) and L-selectin shedding 3 days after BDL. Histologic evaluation (48 ؎ 10% necrosis) and plasma transaminase levels showed severe liver injury. Compared with shamoperated controls (< 10 neutrophils per 20 high-power fields), large numbers of neutrophils were present in livers of BDL mice (425 ؎ 64). About 60% of these neutrophils had extravasated into the parenchyma. In addition, a substantial number of extravasated neutrophils were found in the portal tract. In contrast, Mac-1 was not up-regulated and plasma transaminase activities and the area of necrosis (21 ؎ 9%) were significantly reduced in CD18-deficient animals. These mice had overall 62% less neutrophils in the liver. In particular, extravasation from sinusoids and portal venules (PV) was reduced by 91% and 47%, respectively. Immunohistochemical staining for chlorotyrosine, a marker of neutrophilderived oxidant stress, was observed in the parenchyma of BDL wild-type but not CD18-deficient mice. In conclusion, neutrophils aggravated acute cholestatic liver injury after BDL. This inflammatory injury involves CD18-dependent extravasation of neutrophils from sinusoids and reactive oxygen formation. (HEPATOLOGY 2003;38:355-363.)
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