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Inducible nitric oxide synthase is critical for immune-mediated liver injury in mice
Gabriele Sass, Kerstin Koerber, Renate Bang, Hans Guehring, Gisa Tiegs
Gabriele Sass, Kerstin Koerber, Renate Bang, Hans Guehring, Gisa Tiegs
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Article

Inducible nitric oxide synthase is critical for immune-mediated liver injury in mice

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Abstract

Concanavalin A (Con A) causes severe TNF-α–mediated and IFN-γ–mediated liver injury in mice. In addition to their other functions, TNF-α and IFN-γ both induce the inducible nitric oxide (NO) synthase (iNOS). Using different models of liver injury, NO was found to either mediate or prevent liver damage. To further elucidate the relevance of NO for liver damage we investigated the role of iNOS-derived NO in the Con A model. We report that iNOS mRNA was induced in livers of Con A–treated mice within 2 hours, with iNOS protein becoming detectable in hepatocytes as well as in Kupffer cells within 4 hours. iNOS–/– mice were protected from liver damage after Con A treatment, as well as in another TNF-α–mediated model that is inducible by LPS in D-galactosamine–sensitized (GalN-sensitized) mice. iNOS-deficient mice were not protected after direct administration of recombinant TNF-α to GalN-treated mice. Accordingly, pretreatment of wild-type mice with a potent and specific inhibitor of iNOS significantly reduced transaminase release after Con A or GalN/LPS, but not after GalN/TNF-α treatment. Furthermore, the amount of plasma TNF-α and of intrahepatic TNF-α mRNA and protein was significantly reduced in iNOS–/– mice. Our results demonstrate that iNOS-derived NO regulates proinflammatory genes in vivo, thereby contributing to inflammatory liver injury in mice by stimulation of TNF-α production.

Authors

Gabriele Sass, Kerstin Koerber, Renate Bang, Hans Guehring, Gisa Tiegs

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Figure 2

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Detection of iNOS in livers of Con A–treated mice by immunofluorescence ...
Detection of iNOS in livers of Con A–treated mice by immunofluorescence staining. (a) Con A–induced iNOS expression in livers of BALB/c mice was detected by immunofluorescence staining of liver cryostat sections (rabbit anti-mouse iNOS antiserum, secondary goat anti-rabbit IgG tagged with Cy3; red fluorescence). (b) Costaining of iNOS (rabbit anti-mouse iNOS antiserum, secondary swine anti-rabbit IgG tagged with FITC; green fluorescence) and Kupffer cells (BM8, secondary goat anti-rat IgG tagged with Texas red; red fluorescence) 4 hours after Con A or GalN/LPS treatment. All sections were examined by confocal laser-scanning microscopy. Costaining is represented by yellow fluorescence. Seen in a and b is one example of three independent experiments, respectively.

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ISSN: 0021-9738 (print), 1558-8238 (online)

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