Abstract

Acetaminophen (APAP)-induced liver injury is coupled with activation of the blood coagulation cascade and fibrin(ogen) accumulation within APAP-injured livers of experimental mice. We sought to define the role of fibrin(ogen) deposition in APAP-induced liver injury and repair. Wild-type, fibrinogen-deficient mice, mutant mice with fibrin(ogen) incapable of binding leukocyte αMβ2 integrin (Fibγ390-396A mice) and matrix metalloproteinase 12 (Mmp12)-deficient mice were fasted, injected with 300mg/kg APAP i.p. and evaluated at a range of time-points. Plasma and liver tissue were analyzed. Rescue of Fibγ390-396A mice was carried out with exogenous Mmp12. To examine the effect of the allosteric leukocyte integrin αMβ2 activator leukadherin-1 (LA-1), APAP-treated mice were injected with LA-1. In wild-type mice, APAP overdose increased intrahepatic levels of high molecular weight cross-linked fibrin(ogen). Anticoagulation reduced early APAP hepatotoxicity (6h), but increased hepatic injury at 24h, implying a protective role for coagulation at the onset of repair. Complete fibrin(ogen) deficiency delayed liver repair after APAP overdose, evidenced by a reduction of proliferating hepatocytes (24h) and unresolved hepatocellular necrosis (48 and 72h). Fibγ390-396A mice had decreased hepatocyte proliferation and increased multiple indices of liver injury, suggesting a mechanism related to fibrin(ogen)-leukocyte interaction. Induction of Mmp12, was dramatically reduced in APAP-treated Fibγ390-396A mice. Mice lacking Mmp12 displayed exacerbated APAP-induced liver injury, resembling Fibγ390-396A mice. In contrast, administration of LA-1 enhanced hepatic Mmp12 mRNA and reduced necrosis in APAP-treated mice. Further, administration of recombinant Mmp12 protein to APAP-treated Fibγ390-396A mice restored hepatocyte proliferation. These studies highlight a novel pathway of liver repair after APAP overdose, mediated by fibrin(ogen)-αMβ2 integrin engagement, and demonstrate a protective role of Mmp12 expression after APAP overdose. Acetaminophen overdose leads to activation of coagulation cascade and deposition of high molecular weight cross-linked fibrin(ogen) species in the liver. Fibrin(ogen) is required for stimulating liver repair after acetaminophen overdose. The mechanism whereby fibrin(ogen) drives liver repair after acetaminophen overdose requires engagement of leukocyte αMβ2 integrin and subsequent induction of matrix metalloproteinase 12.

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