Abstract

Emerging evidence has suggested a critical role of leptin in hepatic inflammation and fibrogenesis, however, the precise mechanisms underlying the profibrogenic action of leptin in the liver has not been well elucidated. Therefore, the present study was designed to investigate the expression and functions of leptin receptors (Ob-R) in hepatic sinusoidal cells. Hepatic stellate cells (HSCs), Kupffer cells and sinusoidal endothelial cells (SECs) were isolated from rat livers by in situ collagenase perfusion followed by differential centrifugation technique, and expression of Ob-Ra and Ob-Rb, short and long Ob-R isoforms, respectively, were analyzed by RT-PCR. Ob-Ra mRNA was detected ubiquitously in HSCs and SECs. In contrast, Ob-Rb was detected clearly only in SECs and Kupffer cells, but not in 7-day cultured HSCs. Indeed, tyrosine-phosphorylation of STAT-3, a downstream event of Ob-Rb signaling, was observed in SECs, but not in HSCs, 1 hr after incubation with leptin. Further, leptin increased AP-1 DNA binding activity and TGF-beta 1 mRNA levels in Kupffer cells and SECs, whereas leptin failed to increase TGF-beta 1 mRNA in HSCs. These findings indicated that SECs and Kupffer cells, but not HSCs, express functional leptin receptors, through which leptin elicits production of TGF-beta 1. It is hypothesized therefore that leptin, produced systemically from adipocytes and locally from HSCs, up-regulates TGF-beta 1 thereby facilitate tissue repairing and fibrogenesis in the sinusoidal microenvironment.

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