Abstract
Background/Aims: Pyridinoline, a specific cross-link of mature collagen, increases in liver during fibrogenesis and its hepatic level is related to the degree of reversibility of the fibrotic process. Since pyridinoline is excreted in urine, we have investigated the relationship between its urinary level and liver fibrogenesis in a model of mild and reversible liver fibrosis, murine schistosomiasis. Methods: Pyridinoline was measured by HPLC in urine and in liver of Schistosoma mansoni-infected mice during the acute and the chronic phases of the infection. Collagen deposition was measured colorimetrically. Both the isolated granulomas and the surrounding liver parenchyma were analyzed. Results: In infected mice, pyridinoline increased mainly in the isolated granulomas, corresponding to the fibrotic lesions, and slightly in the surrounding parenchyma. The urinary excretion of pyridinoline increased during liver fibrogenesis and was correlated to the duration of infection ( r=0.81) and to the collagen content of granulomas ( r=0.81). The treatment of infected mice by praziquantel, an antiparasitic drug, did not lead to significant changes in liver collagen cross-linking by pyridinoline either in granulomas or in parenchyma. The major effect of the drug was targeted at the collagen content of parenchyma, which decreased by 50%, 18 weeks after treatment. The urinary level of pyridinoline of treated mice was negatively correlated to the length of the treatment follow-up ( r=−0.76). Conclusions: The measurement of the urinary excretion of pyridinoline could be helpful to monitor the remodeling of liver extracellular matrix occurring in fibrogenesis and the effect of chemotherapy.
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