Abstract

We carried out studies on the expression of liver-specific genes during regeneration of the liver and searched for changes in the expression of oncogenes and housekeeping genes. Albumin and ornithine transcarbamylase genes were the liver-specific genes examined by Northern blot analysis, using total RNAs isolated from residual livers of Sprague-Dawley rats subjected to a 68% partial hepatectomy. The mRNA levels of both genes began to decrease 8 hr after hepatectomy, both reaching the lowest levels at 24 hr, and then recovered to some extent at 48 hr. In contrast, these levels in the housekeeping and growth-related genes were augmented during this period. This would suggest that there is a selective expression of growth-related and housekeeping genes, in preference to liver-specific genes during liver regeneration. The expression of these genes in the regenerating liver was simulated in primary cultured hepatocytes during the dedifferentiation processes. It would appear that the first step in regeneration of the residual liver is dedifferentiation, in which the depression of liver-specific genes may be linked to liver dysfunction following hepatectomy.

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