Back to Search Start Over

Plasma levels of soluble ST2, but not IL-33, correlate with the severity of alcoholic liver disease

Authors :
Zijian Sun
Wei Zhang
Qingsheng Liang
Lin Han
Lei Jin
Jun Zhao
Ji-yuan Zhang
Zhengsheng Zou
Ming Shi
Ang Huang
Binxia Chang
Shuli Hao
Hui Tian
Guangju Teng
Miaomiao Gao
Ying Sun
Source :
Journal of Cellular and Molecular Medicine
Publication Year :
2018
Publisher :
Wiley, 2018.

Abstract

Alcoholic liver disease (ALD) is a complication that is a burden on global health and economy. Interleukin‐33 (IL‐33) is a newly identified member of the IL‐1 cytokine family and is released as an “alarmin” during inflammation. Soluble suppression of tumourigenicity 2 (sST2), an IL‐33 decoy receptor, has been reported as a new biomarker for the severity of systemic and highly inflammatory diseases. Here, we found the levels of plasma sST2, increased with the disease severity from mild to severe ALD. Importantly, the plasma sST2 levels in ALD patients not only correlated with scores for prognostic models (Maddrey's discriminant function, model for end‐stage liver disease and Child‐Pugh scores) and indexes for liver function (total bilirubin, international normalized ratio, albumin, and cholinesterase) but also correlated with neutrophil‐associated factors as well as some proinflammatory cytokines. In vitro, lipopolysaccharide‐activated monocytes down‐regulated transmembrane ST2 receptor but up‐regulated sST2 mRNA and protein expression and produced higher levels of tumour necrosis factor‐α (TNF‐α). By contrast, monocytes pretreated with recombinant sST2 showed decreased TNF‐α production. In addition, although plasma IL‐33 levels were comparable between healthy controls and ALD patients, we found the IL‐33 expression in liver tissues from ALD patients was down‐regulated at both RNA and protein levels. Immunohistochemical staining further showed that the decreased of IL‐33‐positive cells were mainly located in liver lobule area. These results suggested that sST2, but not IL‐33, is closely related to the severity of ALD. Consequently, sST2 could be used as a potential biomarker for predicting the prognosis of ALD.

Details

ISSN :
15821838
Volume :
23
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Cellular and Molecular Medicine
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....5630eb4d0e5b7a2b667a13eaa8cb0eee