Abstract

The liver is a target for bacterial lipopolysaccharide (LPS) and participates in the metabolic response to endotoxemia. Recently published evidence indicates that LPS increases the expression of mitochondrial uncoupling protein-2 (UCP-2) mRNAs in several tissues, including the liver. Because hepatocytes in the healthy liver do not express UCP-2, LPS was thought to induce UCP-2 in liver macrophages, which express UCP-2 constitutively. However, the present studies of cultured peritoneal macrophages indicate that LPS reduces steady state levels of UCP-2 mRNAs in these cells. In contrast, UCP-2 mRNAs are induced in hepatocytes isolated from LPS treated rats and transfection of these hepatocytes with UCP-2 promoter-reporter constructs demonstrates substantial increases in UCP-2 promoter activity. LPS induction of hepatocyte UCP-2 expression is virtually abolished by prior treatment of rats with neutralizing antibodies to tumor necrosis factor α (TNF). Futhermore, TNFα treatment induces UCP-2 mRNA accumulation in primary cultures of hepatocytes from healthy rats. Thus, hepatocytes are likely to be important contributors to endotoxin-related increases in liver UCP-2 via a mechanism that involves the LPS-inducible cytokine, TNFα.

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