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Liver Biology/Pathobiology
An inducible autocrine cascade regulates rat hepatocyte proliferation and apoptosis responses to tumor necrosis factor-ᆇ
Article first published online: 24 MAR 2008
DOI: 10.1002/hep.22335
Copyright © 2008 American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases
Additional Information
How to Cite
Cosgrove, B. D., Cheng, C., Pritchard, J. R., Stolz, D. B., Lauffenburger, D. A. and Griffith, L. G. (2008), An inducible autocrine cascade regulates rat hepatocyte proliferation and apoptosis responses to tumor necrosis factor-α. Hepatology, 48: 276–288. doi: 10.1002/hep.22335
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Animal Experimentation Statement: All animals received humane care according to the criteria outlined in the “Guide for the Care and Use of Laboratory Animals” prepared by the National Academy of Sciences and published by the NIH (NIH publication 86–23).
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Potential conflict of interest: Nothing to report.
Publication History
- Issue published online: 20 JUN 2008
- Article first published online: 24 MAR 2008
- Accepted manuscript online: 24 MAR 2008 12:00AM EST
- Manuscript Accepted: 11 MAR 2008
- Manuscript Received: 19 OCT 2007
Funded by
- National Institutes of Health (NIH). Grant Number: P50-GM68762
- DoD Institute for Collaborative Biotechnologies
- Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) Biotechnology Process Engineering Center
- MIT Center for Environmental Health Sciences. Grant Numbers: NIH U19ES011399, NIH CA76541
- Whitaker Foundation Graduate Fellowship
Abstract
Tumor necrosis factor-α (TNF) is an inflammatory cytokine that induces context-dependent proliferation, survival, and apoptosis responses in hepatocytes. TNF stimulates and enhances growth factor-mediated hepatocyte proliferation and survival following partial hepatectomy, but also acts in concert with other inflammatory cytokines of the innate immune response during viral infection to induce apoptosis in hepatocytes. In other epithelial cell types, TNF has recently been shown to stimulate autocrine release of transforming growth factor-α (TGF-α) and interleukin-1 (IL-1) family ligands. Here, we examine the role of these autocrine ligands in modulating TNF-induced proliferation and apoptosis in primary hepatocytes. We show that TNF-induced hepatocyte proliferation is regulated by an inducible, coupled, and self-antagonizing autocrine cascade involving the pro-proliferative TGF-α and IL-1 receptor antagonist (IL-1ra) ligands and antiproliferative IL-1α/β ligands. Moreover, cooperative stimulation of hepatocyte proliferation by combined TNF and TGF-α treatment is self-limited through antiproliferative autocrine IL-1α/β feedback. We show that TNF potently induces apoptosis of adenovirus-infected hepatocytes in a manner similarly determined through the integrated activity of a coupled TGF-α–IL-1α/β–IL-1ra autocrine cascade. Exogenous TGF-α can either enhance or diminish apoptosis in adenoviral vector-treated and TNF-treated hepatocytes, in a biphasic relationship also mediated by autocrine IL-1α/β feedback. Conclusion: We demonstrate that TNF-induced hepatocyte proliferation and apoptosis are both governed by a self-antagonizing TGF-α–IL-1α/β–IL-1ra autocrine cascade in vitro, and thus identify multiple molecular targets for control of TNF-regulated hepatocyte phenotypic responses related to liver regeneration and adenoviral gene therapy. (HEPATOLOGY 2008.)

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