Abstract

Liver fibrosis and its end-stage disease cirrhosis are major world health problems arising from chronic injury of the liver. In recent years, the hypothesis that hepatic stellate cells’ (HSCs’) activation and fibrosis can be mitigated by HSC apoptosis and cell death has become of interest. In the current study, we evaluated the effect of cholesterol and bile acids on HSC apoptosis and liver fibrosis. Male C57BL/6J mice (wild type), aged four to five weeks, were fed an AIN-93G based diet (normal diet, ND), ND diet + 1% (w/w) cholesterol (CHOL group), ND diet + 0.5% (w/w) cholic acid (CA group) or ND diet + 1% (w/w) cholesterol + 0.5% (w/w) cholic acid (CHOL + CA group). Female Mdr2(-/-) mice were also treated with ND with and without 1% cholesterol. The effect of cholesterol on liver fibrosis and HSC clearance was evaluated. In addition, we studied the mechanism of cholesterol-induced apoptosis in HSC-T6 and AML-12 hepatocyte cell lines. In animals treated with cholic acids, increased lipid peroxidation and fibrosis were observed after six weeks of treatment. However, addition of cholesterol to the diet of C57BL/6J mice led to HSC-specific apoptosis and resolution of liver fibrosis, verified by double-staining with active caspase and α smooth muscle actin antibodies. In Mdr2 (-/-) mice, a diet supplemented with cholesterol corrected fibrosis and induced active hepatic stellate cells’ clearance. HSC-T6 were found to be much more sensitive to cholesterol-induced oxidative stress, mitochondrial damage and apoptosis compared to hepatocytes. These results indicate that cholesterol may be a trigger of HSC lipid peroxidation and death in the liver in a model of non-alcoholic steatohepatitis. A high cholesterol-to-bile acid ratio may determine the trajectory of the liver disease toward mitigation of fibrosis.

Highlights

  • Publisher’s Note: MDPI stays neutralLiver fibrosis and its end-stage disease cirrhosis are major world health problems arising from chronic injury of the liver

  • The hypothesis that hepatic stellate cells’ (HSCs’) activation and fibrosis can be mitigated by clearance due to apoptosis and cell death has become of interest

  • The current study evaluates the effect of cholesterol and bile acid in vivo and in vitro on HSC compared to hepatocytes

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Liver fibrosis and its end-stage disease cirrhosis are major world health problems arising from chronic injury of the liver. The hypothesis that hepatic stellate cells’ (HSCs’) activation and fibrosis can be mitigated by clearance due to apoptosis and cell death has become of interest. Studies in rodents have demonstrated that experimental augmentation of HSC apoptosis will promote the resolution of fibrosis. Loss of activated HSC resulted from an increase in the rate of apoptosis during the first two days post-biliodigestive anastomosis, showing that HSC apoptosis plays a critical role in the spontaneous recovery from biliary fibrosis [1]. Activation of HSC ferroptosis (a necrotic type of cell death) was reported to mitigate hepatic fibrosis [2]. There is considerable interest in determining the molecular events that regulate HSC clearance [3]

Methods
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call