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Cells

Publication date: 2018-08-01
Publisher: Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute (MDPI)

Author:

de Araujo, Alan Moreira
Antunes, Maisa Mota ; Mattos, Matheus Silverio ; Diniz, Ariane Barros ; Alvarenga, Debora Moreira ; Nakagaki, Brenda Naemi ; de Carvalho, Erika ; Souza Lacerda, Viviane Aparecida ; Carvalho-Gontijo, Raquel ; Goulart, Jorge ; Mafra, Kassiana ; Freitas-Lopes, Maria Alice ; de Castro Oliveira, Hortencia Maciel ; Dutra, Camila Miranda ; David, Bruna Araujo ; Silva, Aristobolo Mendes ; Quesniaux, Valerie ; Ryffel, Bernhard ; Oliveira, Sergio Costa ; Barber, Glen N ; Mansur, Daniel Santos ; Cunha, Thiago Mattar ; Rezende, Rafael Machado ; Oliveira, Andre Gustavo ; Menezes, Gustavo Batista

Keywords:

Science & Technology, Life Sciences & Biomedicine, Cell Biology, immune system, DNA sensing, in vivo imaging, immunity, hepatology, HEPATOCYTES, INFLAMMATION, 31 Biological sciences, 32 Biomedical and clinical sciences

Abstract:

Hepatocytes may rupture after a drug overdose, and their intracellular contents act as damage-associated molecular patterns (DAMPs) that lead to additional leukocyte infiltration, amplifying the original injury. Necrosis-derived DNA can be recognized as a DAMP, activating liver non-parenchymal cells (NPCs). We hypothesized that NPCs react to DNA by releasing interferon (IFN)-1, which amplifies acetaminophen (APAP)-triggered liver necrosis. We orally overdosed different knockout mouse strains to investigate the pathways involved in DNA-mediated amplification of APAP-induced necrosis. Mice were imaged under intravital confocal microscopy to estimate injury progression, and hepatocytes and liver NPCs were differentially isolated for gene expression assays. Flow cytometry (FACS) using a fluorescent reporter mouse estimated the interferon-beta production by liver leukocytes under different injury conditions. We also treated mice with DNase to investigate the role of necrosis DNA signaling in IFN-1 production. Hepatocytes released a large amount of DNA after APAP overdose, which was not primarily sensed by these cells. However, liver NPCs promptly sensed such environmental disturbances and activated several DNA sensing pathways. Liver NPCs synthesized and released IFN-1, which was associated with concomitant hepatocyte necrosis. Ablation of IFN-1 recognition in interferon α/β receptor (IFNAR-/-) mice delayed APAP-mediated liver necrosis and dampened IFN-1 sensing pathways. We demonstrated a novel loop involving DNA recognition by hepatic NPCs and additional IFN-1 mediated hepatocyte death.