基因敲除
再灌注损伤
过氧化物酶体增殖物激活受体
肝细胞
炎症
肝损伤
细胞凋亡
脂肪变性
移植
受体
生物
缺血
化学
癌症研究
药理学
医学
体外
内分泌学
免疫学
内科学
生物化学
作者
Baolin Qian,Chaoqun Wang,Xiaozhuang Li,Panfei Ma,Liqian Dong,Benqiang Shen,Huibo Wu,Nana Li,Kai Kang,Yong Ma
摘要
Abstract Background and Aims Hepatic ischaemia/reperfusion injury (HIRI) is a pathophysiological process that occurs during the liver resection and transplantation. Reportedly, peroxisome proliferator‐activated receptor β/δ (PPARβ/δ) can ameliorate kidney and myocardial ischaemia/reperfusion injury. However, the effect of PPARβ/δ in HIRI remains unclear. Methods Mouse hepatic ischaemia/reperfusion (I/R) models were constructed for in vivo study. Primary hepatocytes and Kupffer cells (KCs) isolated from mice and cell anoxia/reoxygenation (A/R) injury model were constructed for in vitro study. Liver injury and inflammation were investigated. Small molecular compounds (GW0742 and GSK0660) and adenoviruses were used to interfere with PPARβ/δ. Results We found that PPARβ/δ expression was increased in the I/R and A/R models. Overexpression of PPARβ/δ in hepatocytes alleviated A/R‐induced cell apoptosis, while knockdown of PPARβ/δ in hepatocytes aggravated A/R injury. Activation of PPARβ/δ by GW0742 protected against I/R‐induced liver damage, inflammation and cell death, whereas inhibition of PPARβ/δ by GSK0660 had the opposite effects. Consistent results were obtained in mouse I/R models through the tail vein injection of adenovirus‐mediated PPARβ/δ overexpression or knockdown vectors. Furthermore, knockdown and overexpression of PPARβ/δ in KCs aggravated and ameliorated A/R‐induced hepatocyte injury, respectively. Gene ontology and gene set enrichment analysis showed that PPARβ/δ deletion was significantly enriched in the NF–κB pathway. PPARβ/δ inhibited the expression of p‐IKBα and p‐P65 and decreased NF–κB activity. Conclusions PPARβ/δ exerts anti‐inflammatory and anti‐apoptotic effects on HIRI by inhibiting the NF–κB pathway, and hepatocytes and KCs may play a synergistic role in this phenomenon. Thus, PPARβ/δ is a potential therapeutic target for HIRI.
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