1. Bile duct-ligated mice exhibit multiple phenotypic similarities to acute decompensation patients despite histological differences.
- Author
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O'Brien, Alastair, China, Louise, Massey, Karen A., Nicolaou, Anna, Winstanley, Alison, Newson, Justine, Hobbs, Adrian, Audzevich, Tatsiana, and Gilroy, Derek W.
- Subjects
CIRRHOSIS of the liver ,INFECTION ,THERAPEUTICS ,BILE ducts ,MACROPHAGES ,PATIENTS - Abstract
Background & Aims Patients with decompensated cirrhosis are susceptible to infection. Innate immune dysfunction and development of organ failure are considered to underlie this. A rodent model of liver disease sharing these phenotypic features would assist in vivo study of underlying mechanisms and testing of therapeutics. We evaluated three models to identify which demonstrated the greatest clinical and immunological phenotypic similarity to patients with acutely decompensated ( AD) cirrhosis. Methods We selected Bile Duct Ligation ( BDL) rats at 4 weeks, BDL mice at 14 days and Carbon tetrachloride ( CCl
4 ) mice at 10 weeks (with studies performed 7 days after final CCl4 infection). We examined organ dysfunction, inflammatory response to carrageenan-in-paw, plasma eicosanoid concentrations, macrophage cytokine production and responses to peritoneal infection. Results Bile duct ligation caused sarcopenia, liver, cardiovascular and renal dysfunction whereas CCl4 mice demonstrated no clinical abnormalities. BDL rodents exhibited depressed response to carrageenan-in-paw unlike CCl4 mice. BDL rats have slightly elevated plasma eicosanoid levels and plasma showed partial PGE2 -mediated immune suppression whereas CCl4 mice did not. Plasma NOx was elevated in patients with acute or chronic liver failure (Ao CLF) compared to healthy volunteers and BDL rodents but not CCl4 mice. Elevated nitric oxide ( NO) via inducible nitric oxide synthase ( iNOS) mediates defective leucocyte trafficking in BDL rodent models. Conclusions We conclude that BDL mice and rats are not simply models of cholestatic liver injury but may be used to study mechanisms underlying poor outcome from infection in AD and have identified elevated NO as a potential mediator of depressed leucocyte trafficking. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2016
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