Liver repopulation with bone marrow derived cells improves the metabolic disorder in the Gunn rat Journal Article


Authors: Muraca, M.; Ferraresso, C.; Vilei, M. T.; Granato, A.; Quarta, M.; Cozzi, E.; Rugge, M.; Pauwelyn, K. A.; Caruso, M.; Avital, I.; Inderbitzin, D.; Demetriou, A. A.; Forbes, S. J.; Realdi, G.
Article Title: Liver repopulation with bone marrow derived cells improves the metabolic disorder in the Gunn rat
Abstract: Background: Reversible ischaemia/reperfusion (I/R) liver injury has been used to induce engraftment and hepatic parenchymal differentiation of exogenous β2-microglubulin-/Thy1+ bone marrow derived cells. Aim: To test the ability of this method of hepatic parenchymal repopulation, theoretically applicable to clinical practice, to correct the metabolic disorder in a rat model of congenital hyperbilirubinaemia. Methods and results: Analysis by confocal laser microscopy of fluorescence labelled cells and by immunohistochemistry for β2-microglubulin, 72 hours after intraportal delivery, showed engraftment of infused cells in liver parenchyma of rats with I/R, but not in control animals with non-injured liver. Transplantation of bone marrow derived cells obtained from GFP-transgenic rats into Lewis rats resulted in the presence of up to 20% of GFP positive hepatocytes in I/R liver lobes after one month. The repopulation rate was proportional to the number of transplanted cells. Infusion of GFP negative bone marrow derived cells into GFP positive transgenic rats resulted in the appearance of GFP negative hepatocytes, suggesting that the main mechanism underlying parenchymal repopulation was differentiation rather than cell fusion. Transplantation of wild type bone marrow derived cells into hyperbilirubinaemic Gunn rats with deficient bilirubin conjugation after I/R damage resulted in 30% decrease in serum bilirubin, the appearance of bilirubin conjugates in bile, and the expression of normal UDP-glucuronyltransferase enzyme evaluated by polymerase chain reaction. Conclusions: I/R injury induced hepatic parenchymal engraftment and differentiation into hepatocyte-like cells of bone marrow derived cells. Transplantation of bone marrow derived cells from non-affected animals resulted in the partial correction of hyperbilirubinaemia in the Gunn rat.
Keywords: immunohistochemistry; controlled study; treatment outcome; nonhuman; animals; hepatocytes; animal experiment; animal model; cell differentiation; cell population; bilirubin; rat; transplantation conditioning; rats; hyperbilirubinemia; bone marrow cell; graft survival; liver cell; liver regeneration; disease models, animal; bone marrow transplantation; confocal laser microscopy; liver injury; cell transplantation; reperfusion injury; gunn rat; hyperbilirubinemia, hereditary; liver circulation; rats, gunn
Journal Title: Gut
Volume: 56
Issue: 12
ISSN: 0017-5749
Publisher: BMJ Publishing Group Ltd.  
Date Published: 2007-12-01
Start Page: 1725
End Page: 1735
Language: English
DOI: 10.1136/gut.2007.127969
PUBMED: 17641081
PROVIDER: scopus
PMCID: PMC2095708
DOI/URL:
Notes: --- - "Cited By (since 1996): 22" - "Export Date: 17 November 2011" - "CODEN: GUTTA" - "Source: Scopus"
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  1. Itzhak Avital
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