Experimental liver cirrhosis induced by alcohol and iron.
Open Access
- 1 July 1995
- journal article
- Published by American Society for Clinical Investigation in Journal of Clinical Investigation
- Vol. 96 (1) , 620-630
- https://doi.org/10.1172/jci118077
Abstract
To determine if alcoholic liver fibrogenesis is exacerbated by dietary iron supplementation, carbonyl iron (0.25% wt/vol) was intragastrically infused with or without ethanol to rats for 16 wk. Carbonyl iron had no effect on blood alcohol concentration, hepatic biochemical measurements, or liver histology in control animals. In both ethanol-fed and control rats, the supplementation produced a two- to threefold increase in the mean hepatic non-heme iron concentration but it remained within or near the range found in normal human subjects. As previously shown, the concentrations of liver malondialdehyde (MDA), liver 4-hydroxynonenal (4HNE), and serum aminotransferases (ALT, AST) were significantly elevated by ethanol infusion alone. The addition of iron supplementation to ethanol resulted in a further twofold increment in mean MDA, 4HNE, ALT, and AST. On histological examination, focal fibrosis was found < 30% of the rats fed ethanol alone. In animals given both ethanol and iron, fibrosis was present in all, with a diffuse central-central bridging pattern in 60%, and two animals (17%) developed micronodular cirrhosis. The iron-potentiated alcoholic liver fibrogenesis was closely associated with intense and diffuse immunostaining for MDA and 4HNE adduct epitopes in the livers. Furthermore, in these animals, accentuated increases in procollagen alpha 1(I) and TGF beta 1 mRNA levels were found in both liver tissues and freshly isolated hepatic stellate cells, perisinusoidal cells believed to be a major source of extracellular matrices in liver fibrosis. The dietary iron supplementation to intragastric ethanol infusion exacerbates hepatocyte damage, promotes liver fibrogenesis, and produces evident cirrhosis in some animals. These results provide evidence for a critical role of iron and iron-catalyzed oxidant stress in progression of alcoholic liver disease.Keywords
This publication has 37 references indexed in Scilit:
- Changes in Cytochromes P‐450, 2E1, 2B1, and 4A, and Phospholipases A and C in the Intragastric Feeding Rat Model for Alcoholic Liver Disease: Relationship to Dietary Fats and Pathologic Liver InjuryAlcohol, Clinical and Experimental Research, 1994
- Stimulation of Lipid Peroxidation or 4-Hydroxynonenal Treatment Increases Procollagen α1 (I) Gene Expression in Human Liver Fat-Storing CellsBiochemical and Biophysical Research Communications, 1993
- The Genotoxic Effects of Arachidonic Acid in V79 Cells Are Mediated by Peroxidation ProductsToxicology and Applied Pharmacology, 1993
- The Cellular Basis of Hepatic Fibrosis -- Mechanisms and Treatment StrategiesNew England Journal of Medicine, 1993
- Role of Cytochrome P–450 2E1 in Ethanol–, Carbon Tetrachloride— and Iron–Dependent Microsomal Lipid PeroxidationHepatology, 1992
- Increased 4–Hydroxynonenal Levels in Experimental Alcoholic Liver Disease: Association of Lipid Peroxidation With Liver FibrogenesisHepatology, 1992
- IκB: a Specific Inhibitor of the NF-κB Transcription FactorScience, 1988
- Ethanol-induced liver fibrosis in rats fed high fat dietHepatology, 1986
- Detection of 4-hydroxynonenal and other lipid peroxidation products in the liver of bromobenzene-poisoned miceBiochimica et Biophysica Acta (BBA) - Lipids and Lipid Metabolism, 1986
- Human transforming growth factor-β complementary DNA sequence and expression in normal and transformed cellsNature, 1985