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In Mice Modeling Wilson's Disease Liver Repopulation With Bone Marrow-Derived Myofibroblasts or Inflammatory Cells and Not Hepatocytes Is Deleterious.

Citation
Sharma, Y., et al. “In Mice Modeling Wilson's Disease Liver Repopulation With Bone Marrow-Derived Myofibroblasts Or Inflammatory Cells And Not Hepatocytes Is Deleterious.”. Gene Expression, pp. 15-24.
Center Albert Einstein College of Medicine
Author Yogeshwar Sharma, Jinghua Liu, Kathleen E Kristian, Antonia Follenzi, Sanjeev Gupta
Abstract

In Wilson's disease, mutations impair copper excretion with liver or brain damage. Healthy transplanted hepatocytes repopulate the liver, excrete copper, and reverse hepatic damage in animal models of Wilson's disease. In mice with tyrosinemia and α-1 antitrypsin mutant mice, liver disease is resolved by expansions of healthy hepatocytes derived from transplanted healthy bone marrow stem cells. This potential of stem cells has not been defined for Wilson's disease. In diseased mice, we reconstituted bone marrow with donor cells expressing green fluorescent protein reporter from healthy transgenic mice. Mature hepatocytes originating from donor bone marrow were identified by immunostaining for green fluorescence protein and bile canalicular marker, dipeptidylpeptidase-4. Mesenchymal and inflammatory cell markers were used for other cells from donor bone marrow cells. Gene expression, liver tests, and tissues were analyzed for outcomes in mice. After bone marrow transplantation in mice, donor-derived hepatocytes containing bile canaliculi appeared within weeks. Despite this maturity, donor-derived hepatocytes neither divided nor expanded. The liver of mice was not repopulated by donor-derived hepatocytes: mRNA remained undetectable; liver tests, copper content, and fibrosis actually worsened. Restriction of proliferation in hepatocytes accompanied oxidative DNA damage. By contrast, donor-derived mesenchymal and inflammatory cells extensively proliferated. These contributed to fibrogenesis through greater expression of inflammatory cytokines. In Wilson's disease, donor bone marrow-derived cells underwent different fates: hepatocytes failed to proliferate; inflammatory cells proliferated to worsen disease outcomes. This will help guide stem cell therapies for conditions with proinflammatory or profibrogenic microenvironments.

Year of Publication
2018
Journal
Gene expression
Volume
19
Issue
1
Number of Pages
15-24
Date Published
12/2018
ISSN Number
1052-2166
DOI
10.3727/105221618X15320123457380
Alternate Journal
Gene Expr.
PMID
30029699
PMCID
PMC6290324
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