Abstract

The aim of this study was to follow semiquantitatively by immunohistochemical means the alterations of the expression of the hepatic glycoproteins tenascin, fibronectin, and laminin in two different models of chronic liver injury, i.e. thioacetamide-induced liver cirrhosis and fibrosis after bile duct ligation. The tenascin distribution pattern observed during cholostasis-induced liver fibrosis showed some similarities, but also some differences in comparison with the results obtained after TAA intoxication. Most importantly, the data show that tenascin staining was detectable in almost all areas of the chronically injured livers up to 3 and 6 months in bile duct-ligated and chemically-injured livers, respectively. Thus, tenascin does not seem to play only a transient role in the fibrogenetic process as previously suggested. Laminin was strongly stained in proliferating ductules, whereas only a weak continuous distribution was observed along the sinusoidal wall. Furthermore, our findings confirm the role of fibronectin as a pacemaker of fibrosis. Regional differences in the kinetics of the expression of the glycoproteins may reflect local differences in their production by parenchymal or non parenchymal cells or regional patterns of proteolytic activity.

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