Two types of experimental liver failure in mice were investigated to study the immune mechanisms of liver disease: 1) T-cell-mediated injury induced by administration of concanavalin A (ConA) and 2) antibody-mediated injury induced by administration of anti-liver antibodies (ALA, gamma-globulin fraction of sera from rabbits immunized with liver tissue). It was established, that both types of liver injury were accompanied by the activation of immune processes in the liver, as shown by the increase of liver mononuclear cell proliferation, estimated using IPO-38 monoclonal antibodies. In contrast to ConA treatment, the immune activation under ALA-treatment was also associated with the increase in the percentage of plasma cells and small lymphocytes in liver mononuclear cells. At the same time, an increase in apoptotic and necrotic mononuclear cell death was more pronounced under ConA-treatment. This was accompanied by enhanced Fas receptor expression in these cells. Thus, it was shown that in case of T-cell mediated liver injury, the balance between cell proliferation and cell death in mononuclear liver cells was shifted toward the significant increase of apoptotic and necrotic cell death, particularly Fas-mediated apoptosis, while immune processes activation and cell proliferation were more pronounced in the case of antibodies-mediated injury.
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