Repair pathways evident in human liver organ slices

Alison E. M. Vickers*, Robyn Fisher, Peter Olinga, Sharon Dial

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

16 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

The extension of human liver slice culture viability for several days broadens the potential of this ex vivo model for characterizing pathways of organ injury and repair, and allows for the multiple dosing of compounds. Extended viability is demonstrated by continued synthesis of GSH and ATP, and maintenance of intracellular K+ levels. Gene expression profiling revealed the activation of regeneration pathways via increased expression of collagens (I, IV, and V), laminins, ninjurin, growth factors (EGF, epiregulin, and TGF-beta 1), matrix metalloproteinase-7, and insulin like growth factor 5. Collagen IV protein levels began to increase by day 4 of culture. Some markers of hepatic stellate cells, detected by RTPCR, were up-regulated (HSP47, alpha SMA, pro-collagen 1a1, PDGF receptor, thrombospondin-2) with time in culture, while other markers exhibited no change or were down-regulated (alpha B-crystallin, synaptophysin), suggesting that the induction of regenerative pathways may in part be the role of the stellate cells as well as resident fibroblasts. Complimentary to the gene expression was evidence of regeneration in the human liver slices, as evaluated by histopathology. Improvements in organ acquisition, organ slice preparation and culture methods demonstrates that organ slice viability, integrity and morphology can be extended reproducibly for several days in culture which allows for the investigation of injury and repair processes. (C) 2011 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1485-1492
Number of pages8
JournalToxicology in Vitro
Volume25
Issue number7
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Oct-2011

Keywords

  • Human liver slices
  • Repair pathways
  • STELLATE CELL ACTIVATION
  • GROWTH-FACTOR-BETA
  • COLLAGEN TYPE-I
  • RAT-LIVER
  • EXTRACELLULAR-MATRIX
  • HEPATOCELLULAR-CARCINOMA
  • HEPATIC REGENERATION
  • RENAL INJURY
  • VITRO MODEL
  • EXPRESSION

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