Abstract

Acetaminophen (APAP, paracetamol)-induced hepatotoxicity, although treatable by timely application of N-acetylcysteine, can be fatal. Because it is among the common causes of acute liver failure in intensive care units and in light of its gradually increasing incidence, the need for novel therapeutic strategies aimed at severe intoxication is apparent. Recently, it has been shown that IL-22, a STAT3-activating cytokine, has the capability to mediate liver protection. Herein, the protective potential of IL-22 in murine APAP-induced hepatotoxicity was assessed. Intravenous administration of prophylactic IL-22 significantly reduced serum alanine aminotransferase levels and histopathologic damage in APAP-induced liver injury, a process that coincided with increased hepatocyte proliferation invivo. Concomitant gene expression analysis revealed hepatic induction of genes prototypically up-regulated by the IL-22/STAT3 axis, among others suppressor of cytokine signaling-3, lipocalin-2, and α1-antichymotrypsin. Notably, in a translational setting of therapeutic treatment 2 hours after APAP, IL-22 supported protection in the context of suboptimal N-acetylcysteine dosing. IL-22 likewise connected to augmented hepatocyte proliferation in this experimental setting. As detected by analysis of inflammatory cytokine production, systemically applied IL-22 did not display acute immunomodulation/stimulation in otherwise untreated or endotoxemic mice. Those latter observations clearly confirm acute tolerability of systemically applied IL-22. Observations presented altogether suggest that therapeutic IL-22 administration is a conceivable tissue-protective regimen aimed at hard-to-treat patients with severe APAP-induced hepatotoxicity.

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