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      Bile acids initiate cholestatic liver injury by triggering a hepatocyte-specific inflammatory response

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          Abstract

          Mechanisms of bile acid–induced (BA-induced) liver injury in cholestasis are controversial, limiting development of new therapies. We examined how BAs initiate liver injury using isolated liver cells from humans and mice and in-vivo mouse models. At pathophysiologic concentrations, BAs induced proinflammatory cytokine expression in mouse and human hepatocytes, but not in nonparenchymal cells or cholangiocytes. These hepatocyte-specific cytokines stimulated neutrophil chemotaxis. Inflammatory injury was mitigated in Ccl2 –/– mice treated with BA or after bile duct ligation, where less hepatic infiltration of neutrophils was detected. Neutrophils in periportal areas of livers from cholestatic patients also correlated with elevations in their serum aminotransferases. This liver-specific inflammatory response required BA entry into hepatocytes via basolateral transporter Ntcp. Pathophysiologic levels of BAs induced markers of ER stress and mitochondrial damage in mouse hepatocytes. Chemokine induction by BAs was reduced in hepatocytes from Tlr9 –/– mice, while liver injury was diminished both in conventional and hepatocyte-specific Tlr9 –/– mice, confirming a role for Tlr9 in BA-induced liver injury. These findings reveal potentially novel mechanisms whereby BAs elicit a hepatocyte-specific cytokine-induced inflammatory liver injury that involves innate immunity and point to likely novel pathways for treating cholestatic liver disease.

          Abstract

          Bile acids elicit hepatocyte-specific, proinflammatory cytokine production that stimulates neutrophil infiltration and liver injury.

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          Author and article information

          Contributors
          Journal
          JCI Insight
          JCI Insight
          JCI Insight
          JCI Insight
          American Society for Clinical Investigation
          2379-3708
          9 March 2017
          9 March 2017
          9 March 2017
          : 2
          : 5
          : e90780
          Affiliations
          [1 ]Department of Internal Medicine and Yale Liver Center, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, Connecticut, USA.
          [2 ]Institute of Medicinal Biotechnology, Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences and Peking Union Medical College, Beijing, China.
          Author notes
          Address correspondence to: Shi-Ying Cai or James L. Boyer, Liver Center, Yale University School of Medicine, 333 Cedar Street, 1080 LMP, New Haven, Connecticut 06520, USA. Phone: 203.785.3150; E-mail: shi-ying.cai@ 123456yale.edu (S.Y. Cai). Phone: 203.785.5279; E-mail: james.boyer@ 123456yale.edu (J.L. Boyer).
          Author information
          http://orcid.org/0000-0003-3423-0042
          Article
          PMC5333973 PMC5333973 5333973 90780
          10.1172/jci.insight.90780
          5333973
          28289714
          309574ee-a026-48e1-af7a-8d8b105152a4
          Copyright © 2017, American Society for Clinical Investigation
          History
          : 19 September 2016
          : 19 January 2017
          Categories
          Research Article

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