TY - JOUR
T1 - Inhibition of bile-salt-induced hepatocyte apoptosis by the antioxidant lazaroid U83836E
AU - Patel, Tushar
AU - Gores, Gregory J.
N1 - Funding Information:
1This work was supported by Grant DK 41876 from the National Institutes of Health (G.J.G.), the Gainey Foundation (G.J.G.), a postdoctoral fellowship award from the American Gastroenterological Association (T.P.), and the Mayo Foundation. Preliminary portions of this work were presented at Experimental Biology 95 and at the 95th meeting of the American College of Gastroenterology and published in abstract form (FASEB J. 9, A418, 1995; and Am. J. Gastro. 90, 1627, 1995).
PY - 1997/1
Y1 - 1997/1
N2 - Intracellular retention of toxic bile salts contributes to hepatocellular injury during cholestasis. We have recently demonstrated that toxic bile salts directly induce apoptosis in hepatocytes. As oxidative stress has been implicated in many models of apoptosis, our aim was to determine if oxidative injury is a critical event during bile-salt-induced hepatocyte apoptosis. Cultured rat hepatocytes incubated with 50 μM glycochenodeoxycholate (GCDC) exhibited the characteristic morphological features of apoptosis such as nuclear fragmentation and cellular fragmentation into organelle-containing membrane-bound apoptotic bodies. After a 3-hr incubation, apoptosis was observed in 60 ± 8% of cells compared to <1% in controls. GCDC-induced apoptosis was associated with lipid peroxidation as demonstrated by an increase in 8-isoprostane release. The antioxidant lazaroid U83836E inhibited 8-isoprostane generation during GCDC-induced hepatocyte apoptosis. In addition, U83836E also reduced GCDC-mediated apoptosis by 70% as assessed using both stringent morphologic (nuclear fragmentation) and biochemical (determination of DNA strand breaks) criteria. In summary, during treatment of hepatocytes with GCDC, (1) apoptosis is associated with lipid peroxidation, and (2) the antioxidant lazaroid U83836E inhibits both lipid peroxidation and apoptosis, In conclusion, these data suggest that oxidative stress contributes to bile-salt-induced apoptosis. We speculate that antioxidants may be useful in ameliorating liver injury during chronic cholestasis.
AB - Intracellular retention of toxic bile salts contributes to hepatocellular injury during cholestasis. We have recently demonstrated that toxic bile salts directly induce apoptosis in hepatocytes. As oxidative stress has been implicated in many models of apoptosis, our aim was to determine if oxidative injury is a critical event during bile-salt-induced hepatocyte apoptosis. Cultured rat hepatocytes incubated with 50 μM glycochenodeoxycholate (GCDC) exhibited the characteristic morphological features of apoptosis such as nuclear fragmentation and cellular fragmentation into organelle-containing membrane-bound apoptotic bodies. After a 3-hr incubation, apoptosis was observed in 60 ± 8% of cells compared to <1% in controls. GCDC-induced apoptosis was associated with lipid peroxidation as demonstrated by an increase in 8-isoprostane release. The antioxidant lazaroid U83836E inhibited 8-isoprostane generation during GCDC-induced hepatocyte apoptosis. In addition, U83836E also reduced GCDC-mediated apoptosis by 70% as assessed using both stringent morphologic (nuclear fragmentation) and biochemical (determination of DNA strand breaks) criteria. In summary, during treatment of hepatocytes with GCDC, (1) apoptosis is associated with lipid peroxidation, and (2) the antioxidant lazaroid U83836E inhibits both lipid peroxidation and apoptosis, In conclusion, these data suggest that oxidative stress contributes to bile-salt-induced apoptosis. We speculate that antioxidants may be useful in ameliorating liver injury during chronic cholestasis.
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U2 - 10.1006/taap.1996.8031
DO - 10.1006/taap.1996.8031
M3 - Article
C2 - 9007040
AN - SCOPUS:0031027992
SN - 0041-008X
VL - 142
SP - 116
EP - 122
JO - Toxicology and Applied Pharmacology
JF - Toxicology and Applied Pharmacology
IS - 1
ER -