Isoprostanes and hepatic fibrosis.

Mol Aspects Med

Department of Pathophysiology, Experimental Medicine and Public Health, University of Siena, 53100 Siena, Italy.

Published: July 2008

After a brief introduction to oxidative stress, the discovery of F(2)-isoprostanes as specific and reliable markers of oxidative stress is described. Isoprostanes are also agonists of important biological effects. Since a relation between oxidative stress and collagen hyperproduction has been previously suggested and since lipid peroxidation products have been proposed as possible mediators of liver fibrosis, we investigated whether collagen synthesis is induced by F(2)-isoprostanes the most proximal products of lipid peroxidation. In a rat model of carbon tetrachloride-induced hepatic fibrosis, plasma isoprostanes were markedly elevated for the entire experimental period; hepatic collagen content was also increased. When hepatic stellate cells from normal liver were cultured up to activation (expression of alpha-smooth muscle-alpha actin) and then treated with F(2)-isoprostanes in the concentration range found in the in vivo studies (10(-9)-10(-8)M), a striking increase in DNA synthesis, in cell proliferation and in collagen synthesis was observed. Moreover, F(2)-isoprostanes increased the production of transforming growth factor-beta1 by U937 cells, assumed as a model of Kupffer cells or liver macrophages. The data suggest the possibility that F(2)-isoprostanes generated by lipid peroxidation in hepatocytes mediate hepatic stellate cell proliferation and collagen hyperproduction seen in hepatic fibrosis.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.mam.2007.09.011DOI Listing

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