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Moderate (2%, v/v) Ethanol Feeding Alters Hepatic Wound Healing after Acute Carbon Tetrachloride Exposure in Mice

Wound healing consists of three overlapping phases: inflammation, proliferation, and matrix synthesis and remodeling. Prolonged alcohol abuse can cause liver fibrosis due to deregulated matrix remodeling. Previous studies demonstrated that moderate ethanol feeding enhances liver fibrogenic markers a...

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Autores principales: Deshpande, Krutika T., Liu, Shinlan, McCracken, Jennifer M., Jiang, Lu, Gaw, Ta Ehpaw, Kaydo, Lindsey N., Richard, Zachary C., O’Neil, Maura F., Pritchard, Michele T.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4808799/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26751492
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/biom6010005
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author Deshpande, Krutika T.
Liu, Shinlan
McCracken, Jennifer M.
Jiang, Lu
Gaw, Ta Ehpaw
Kaydo, Lindsey N.
Richard, Zachary C.
O’Neil, Maura F.
Pritchard, Michele T.
author_facet Deshpande, Krutika T.
Liu, Shinlan
McCracken, Jennifer M.
Jiang, Lu
Gaw, Ta Ehpaw
Kaydo, Lindsey N.
Richard, Zachary C.
O’Neil, Maura F.
Pritchard, Michele T.
author_sort Deshpande, Krutika T.
collection PubMed
description Wound healing consists of three overlapping phases: inflammation, proliferation, and matrix synthesis and remodeling. Prolonged alcohol abuse can cause liver fibrosis due to deregulated matrix remodeling. Previous studies demonstrated that moderate ethanol feeding enhances liver fibrogenic markers and frank fibrosis independent of differences in CCl(4)-induced liver injury. Our objective was to determine whether or not other phases of the hepatic wound healing response were affected by moderate ethanol after CCl(4) exposure. Mice were fed moderate ethanol (2% v/v) for two days and then were exposed to CCl(4) and euthanized 24–96 h later. Liver injury was not different between pair- and ethanol-fed mice; however, removal of necrotic tissue was delayed after CCl(4)-induced liver injury in ethanol-fed mice. Inflammation, measured by TNFα mRNA and protein and hepatic Ly6c transcript accumulation, was reduced and associated with enhanced hepatocyte apoptosis after ethanol feeding. Hepatocytes entered the cell cycle equivalently in pair- and ethanol-fed mice after CCl(4) exposure, but hepatocyte proliferation was prolonged in livers from ethanol-fed mice. CCl(4)-induced hepatic stellate cell activation was increased and matrix remodeling was prolonged in ethanol-fed mice compared to controls. Taken together, moderate ethanol affected each phase of the wound healing response to CCl(4). These data highlight previously unknown effects of moderate ethanol exposure on hepatic wound healing after acute hepatotoxicant exposure.
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spelling pubmed-48087992016-04-04 Moderate (2%, v/v) Ethanol Feeding Alters Hepatic Wound Healing after Acute Carbon Tetrachloride Exposure in Mice Deshpande, Krutika T. Liu, Shinlan McCracken, Jennifer M. Jiang, Lu Gaw, Ta Ehpaw Kaydo, Lindsey N. Richard, Zachary C. O’Neil, Maura F. Pritchard, Michele T. Biomolecules Article Wound healing consists of three overlapping phases: inflammation, proliferation, and matrix synthesis and remodeling. Prolonged alcohol abuse can cause liver fibrosis due to deregulated matrix remodeling. Previous studies demonstrated that moderate ethanol feeding enhances liver fibrogenic markers and frank fibrosis independent of differences in CCl(4)-induced liver injury. Our objective was to determine whether or not other phases of the hepatic wound healing response were affected by moderate ethanol after CCl(4) exposure. Mice were fed moderate ethanol (2% v/v) for two days and then were exposed to CCl(4) and euthanized 24–96 h later. Liver injury was not different between pair- and ethanol-fed mice; however, removal of necrotic tissue was delayed after CCl(4)-induced liver injury in ethanol-fed mice. Inflammation, measured by TNFα mRNA and protein and hepatic Ly6c transcript accumulation, was reduced and associated with enhanced hepatocyte apoptosis after ethanol feeding. Hepatocytes entered the cell cycle equivalently in pair- and ethanol-fed mice after CCl(4) exposure, but hepatocyte proliferation was prolonged in livers from ethanol-fed mice. CCl(4)-induced hepatic stellate cell activation was increased and matrix remodeling was prolonged in ethanol-fed mice compared to controls. Taken together, moderate ethanol affected each phase of the wound healing response to CCl(4). These data highlight previously unknown effects of moderate ethanol exposure on hepatic wound healing after acute hepatotoxicant exposure. MDPI 2016-01-06 /pmc/articles/PMC4808799/ /pubmed/26751492 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/biom6010005 Text en © 2016 by the authors; licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons by Attribution (CC-BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Deshpande, Krutika T.
Liu, Shinlan
McCracken, Jennifer M.
Jiang, Lu
Gaw, Ta Ehpaw
Kaydo, Lindsey N.
Richard, Zachary C.
O’Neil, Maura F.
Pritchard, Michele T.
Moderate (2%, v/v) Ethanol Feeding Alters Hepatic Wound Healing after Acute Carbon Tetrachloride Exposure in Mice
title Moderate (2%, v/v) Ethanol Feeding Alters Hepatic Wound Healing after Acute Carbon Tetrachloride Exposure in Mice
title_full Moderate (2%, v/v) Ethanol Feeding Alters Hepatic Wound Healing after Acute Carbon Tetrachloride Exposure in Mice
title_fullStr Moderate (2%, v/v) Ethanol Feeding Alters Hepatic Wound Healing after Acute Carbon Tetrachloride Exposure in Mice
title_full_unstemmed Moderate (2%, v/v) Ethanol Feeding Alters Hepatic Wound Healing after Acute Carbon Tetrachloride Exposure in Mice
title_short Moderate (2%, v/v) Ethanol Feeding Alters Hepatic Wound Healing after Acute Carbon Tetrachloride Exposure in Mice
title_sort moderate (2%, v/v) ethanol feeding alters hepatic wound healing after acute carbon tetrachloride exposure in mice
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4808799/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26751492
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/biom6010005
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