Abstract
Background/Aims: Liver sinusoids contain a large population of spontaneously cytotoxic cells (NK cells), CD8+ T cells and macrophages. The physiological role of these leucocytes remains unclear. They may participate in immune surveillance and peripheral tolerance by deleting tumour cells, virus-infected cells and activated T cells as they traffic through the liver. In order to gain further information about the function of these leucocytes within the hepatic sinusoids, we examined their production of immunomodulatory cytokines and apoptosis-related molecules.Methods: Semi-quantitative polymerase chain reaction and immunohistochemistry were used to determine the spontaneous production of cytokines and apoptosis-related molecules by sinusoidal leucocytes isolated from donor liver preservation solution.Results: In comparison with matched peripheral blood mononuclear cells, sinusoidal leucocytes produced more mRNA for IL-10, IL-15, TNF-α, IL-18, IFN-γ, FasL, perforin and granzyme. IL-4 and IL-12 were not detected and IL-2 was only faintly detected in the liver-derived CD4+ population. Less bcl-2 was expressed in liver-derived CD4+ and CD8+ cells in comparison with matched peripheral blood cell populations.Conclusions: The cytokines produced spontaneously by sinusoidal leucocytes are consistent with their high level of activation and spontaneous cytotoxicity. Their strong expression of apoptosis-mediating molecules (FasL, perforin, granzyme and TNF-α) support a role for these cells in immune surveillance and peripheral tolerance induction.
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