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Epidermal growth factor receptor restoration rescues the fatty liver regeneration in mice.

Citation
Zimmers, T. A., et al. “Epidermal Growth Factor Receptor Restoration Rescues The Fatty Liver Regeneration In Mice.”. American Journal Of Physiology. Endocrinology And Metabolism, pp. E440-E449.
Center Indiana University
Author Teresa A Zimmers, Xiaoling Jin, Zongxiu Zhang, Yanlin Jiang, Leonidas G Koniaris
Keywords epidermal growth factor receptor, gene transfer, hepatectomy, Microarray, proliferation, steatosis
Abstract

Hepatic steatosis is a common histological finding in obese patients. Even mild steatosis is associated with delayed hepatic regeneration and poor outcomes following liver resection or transplantation. We sought to identify and target molecular pathways that mediate this dysfunction. Lean mice and mice made obese through feeding of a high-fat, hypercaloric diet underwent 70 or 80% hepatectomy. After 70% resection, obese mice demonstrated 100% survival but experienced increased liver injury, reduced energy stores, reduced mitoses, increased necroapoptosis, and delayed recovery of liver mass. Increasing liver resection to 80% was associated with mortality of 40% in lean and 80% in obese mice ( < 0.05). Gene expression profiling showed decreased epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) in fatty liver. Meta-analysis of expression studies in mice, rats, and patients also demonstrated reduction of in fatty liver. In mice, both EGFR and phosphorylated EGFR decreased with increasing percent body fat. Hydrodynamic transfection of EGFR plasmids in mice corrected fatty liver regeneration, reducing liver injury, increasing proliferation, and improving survival after 80% resection. Loss of EGFR expression is rate limiting for liver regeneration in obesity. Therapies directed at increasing EGFR in steatosis might promote liver regeneration and survival following hepatic resection or transplantation.

Year of Publication
2017
Journal
American journal of physiology. Endocrinology and metabolism
Volume
313
Issue
4
Number of Pages
E440-E449
Date Published
12/2017
ISSN Number
1522-1555
DOI
10.1152/ajpendo.00032.2017
Alternate Journal
Am. J. Physiol. Endocrinol. Metab.
PMID
28655714
PMCID
PMC5668597
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