Acetalde hyde‐Induced Stimulation of Collagen Synthesis and Gene Expression Is Dependent on Conditions of Cell Culture: Studies with Rat Lipocytes and Fibroblasts
- 11 April 1994
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in Alcohol, Clinical and Experimental Research
- Vol. 18 (2) , 403-409
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1530-0277.1994.tb00033.x
Abstract
Acetaldehyde has been proposed as a mediator of fibrogenesis in alcoholic liver disease, based in part on its ability to stimulate collagen synthesis by hepatic lipocytes in late primary or passaged culture. In this study, we examined the effect of acetaldehyde on rat lipocytes and fibroblasts at various stages of culture, in an effort to determine whether culture-related events influence responsiveness to this compound. Lipocytes from normal rat liver were studied in primary culture at 3 and 7 days after plating; fibroblasts were studied in subculture, at subconfluent and confluent densities. Both cell types were incubated with 100 microM acetaldehyde for 24 hr followed by measurement of collagen synthesis and type I collagen gene expression. Acetaldehyde had no effect on lipocytes at either 3 or 7 days in primary culture. The inability of acetaldehyde to stimulate collagen synthesis in primary culture was not attributable to toxicity, because cell morphology and total protein synthesis were identical in both treated and untreated cultures. Fibroblasts exhibited a variable response to acetaldehyde that was dependent on cell density: subconfluent cells contained similar amounts of type I collagen mRNA in both the presence and absence of acetaldehyde, whereas confluent cells exhibited a 2- to 3-fold increase in collagen mRNA levels upon acetaldehyde exposure. To determine whether quiescent lipocytes would respond to acetaldehyde in a culture system that mimics the hepatic environment in vivo, lipocytes were plated in coculture with hepatocytes on a basement membrane gel and incubated with 20 mM ethanol for 72 hr. Direct communication between these two cell types did not provoke lipocyte activation, even in the setting of ethanol oxidation.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)Keywords
This publication has 39 references indexed in Scilit:
- Effect of acetaldehyde on collagen synthesis by fat-storing cells isolated from rats treated with carbon tetrachlorideLiver International, 2008
- Acetaldehyde selectively stimulates collagen production in cultured rat liver fat-storing cells but not in hepatocytesHepatology, 1990
- Activation of cultured rat hepatic lipocytes by Kupffer cell conditioned medium. Direct enhancement of matrix synthesis and stimulation of cell proliferation via induction of platelet-derived growth factor receptors.Journal of Clinical Investigation, 1989
- Differential effects of interleukin‐1α, tumor necrosis factor α, and transforming growth factor β1 on cell proliferation and collagen formation by cultured fat‐storing cellsLiver International, 1989
- Lipocytes and transitional cells in alcoholic liver disease: A morphometric studyHepatology, 1988
- Immune Responses to Alcohol Metabolites: Pathogenic and Diagnostic ImplicationsSeminars in Liver Disease, 1988
- Improved Methods for the Measurement of Acetaldehyde Concentrations in Plasma and Red Blood CellsAlcohol, Clinical and Experimental Research, 1986
- Early alcoholic liver injuryJournal of Hepatology, 1986
- The Role of Fat-Storing Cells in Disse Space Fibrogenesis in Alcoholic Liver DiseaseHepatology, 1983
- Effects of Prolonged Ethanol Intake: Production of Fatty Liver Despite Adequate Diets*Journal of Clinical Investigation, 1965