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Item The Apelin–Apelin Receptor Axis Triggers Cholangiocyte Proliferation and Liver Fibrosis During Mouse Models of Cholestasis(Wiley, 2021-06) Chen, Lixian; Zhou, Tianhao; White, Tori; O'Brien, April; Chakraborty, Sanjukta; Liangpunsakul, Suthat; Yang, Zhihong; Kennedy, Lindsey; Saxena, Romil; Wu, Chaodong; Meng, Fanyin; Huang, Qiaobing; Francis, Heather; Alpini, Gianfranco; Glaser, Shannon; Medicine, School of MedicineBackground and Aims Apelin (APLN) is the endogenous ligand of its G protein–coupled receptor, apelin receptor (APJ). APLN serum levels are increased in human liver diseases. We evaluated whether the APLN–APJ axis regulates ductular reaction and liver fibrosis during cholestasis. Approach and Results We measured the expression of APLN and APJ and serum APLN levels in human primary sclerosing cholangitis (PSC) samples. Following bile duct ligation (BDL) or sham surgery, male wild-type (WT) mice were treated with ML221 (APJ antagonist) or saline for 1 week. WT and APLN−/− mice underwent BDL or sham surgery for 1 week. Multidrug resistance gene 2 knockout (Mdr2−/−) mice were treated with ML221 for 1 week. APLN levels were measured in serum and cholangiocyte supernatants, and cholangiocyte proliferation/senescence and liver inflammation, fibrosis, and angiogenesis were measured in liver tissues. The regulatory mechanisms of APLN–APJ in (1) biliary damage and liver fibrosis were examined in human intrahepatic biliary epithelial cells (HIBEpiCs) treated with APLN and (2) hepatic stellate cell (HSC) activation in APLN-treated human HSC lines (HHSteCs). APLN serum levels and biliary expression of APLN and APJ increased in PSC samples. APLN levels were higher in serum and cholangiocyte supernatants from BDL and Mdr2−/− mice. ML221 treatment or APLN−/− reduced BDL-induced and Mdr2−/−-induced cholangiocyte proliferation/senescence, liver inflammation, fibrosis, and angiogenesis. In vitro, APLN induced HIBEpiC proliferation, increased nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate oxidase 4 (Nox4) expression, reactive oxygen species (ROS) generation, and extracellular signal–regulated kinase (ERK) phosphorylation. Pretreatment of HIBEpiCs with ML221, diphenyleneiodonium chloride (Nox4 inhibitor), N-acetyl-cysteine (NAC, ROS inhibitor), or PD98059 (ERK inhibitor) reduced APLN-induced cholangiocyte proliferation. Activation of HHSteCs was induced by APLN but reduced by NAC. Conclusions The APLN–APJ axis induces cholangiocyte proliferation through Nox4/ROS/ERK-dependent signaling and HSC activation through intracellular ROS. Modulation of the APLN–APJ axis may be important for managing cholangiopathies.Item Autotaxin expression and its connection with the TNF-alpha-NF-κB axis in human hepatocellular carcinoma(BMC, 2010-03-31) Wu, Jian-Min; Xu, Yan; Skill, Nicholas J.; Sheng, Hongmiao; Zhao, Zhenwen; Yu, Menggang; Saxena, Romil; Maluccio, Mary A.; Surgery, School of MedicineBackground Autotaxin (ATX) is an extracellular lysophospholipase D that generates lysophosphatidic acid (LPA) from lysophosphatidylcholine (LPC). Both ATX and LPA have been shown to be involved in many cancers. However, the functional role of ATX and the regulation of ATX expression in human hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) remain elusive. Results In this study, ATX expression was evaluated in tissues from 38 human HCC and 10 normal control subjects. ATX was detected mainly in tumor cells within tissue sections and its over-expression in HCC was specifically correlated with inflammation and liver cirrhosis. In addition, ATX expression was examined in normal human hepatocytes and liver cancer cell lines. Hepatoma Hep3B and Huh7 cells displayed stronger ATX expression than hepatoblastoma HepG2 cells and normal hepatocytes did. Proinflammtory cytokine tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF-α) promoted ATX expression and secretion selectively in Hep3B and Huh7 cells, which led to a corresponding increase in lysophospholipase-D activity. Moreover, we explored the mechanism governing the expression of ATX in hepatoma cells and established a critical role of nuclear factor-kappa B (NF-κB) in basal and TNF-α induced ATX expression. Further study showed that secreted enzymatically active ATX stimulated Hep3B cell invasion. Conclusions This report highlights for the first time the clinical and biological evidence for the involvement of ATX in human HCC. Our observation that links the TNF-α/NF-κB axis and the ATX-LPA signaling pathway suggests that ATX is likely playing an important role in inflammation related liver tumorigenesis.Item Concordance of Solid Organ Biopsy Diagnoses With Hospital Autopsy and the Contribution of Biopsies to Death(Springer Nature, 2023-01-17) Priemer, David S.; Curran, Joseph M.; Phillips, Carrie L.; Cummings, Oscar W.; Saxena, Romil; Pathology and Laboratory Medicine, School of MedicineBiopsies of the liver, lung, and kidney are performed for many indications, including organ dysfunction, mass lesions, and allograft monitoring. The diagnosis depends on the sample, which may or may not be representative of the lesion or pathology in question. Further, biopsies are not without risk of complications. Autopsies are a resource for assessing the accuracy of biopsy diagnoses and evaluating possible complications. Herein, we aimed to compare liver, lung, and kidney biopsy diagnoses with those from autopsies conducted soon after the procedure and to assess the contribution of biopsy to mortality. A 28-year search of our database identified 147 patients who were autopsied after dying within 30 days of a liver, lung, or kidney biopsy. The concordance of the biopsy diagnosis with the autopsy findings was determined. Finally, medical records were reviewed to determine the likelihood that a biopsy contributed to the patient's death. The contribution of the biopsy to death was categorized as "unlikely," "possible," or "probable." Overall concordance between biopsy and autopsy diagnoses was 87% (128/147), including 95% (87/92), 71% (32/45), and 90% (9/10) for liver, lung, and kidney biopsies, respectively. Concordance was lower for biopsies of suspected neoplasms versus non-neoplastic diseases. Lung biopsy concordance was higher for wedge biopsy versus needle or forceps biopsy. A biopsy was determined to at least "possibly" contribute to death in 23 cases (16%). In conclusion, an autopsy is an important tool to validate liver, lung, or kidney biopsy diagnoses. Confirmation of biopsy diagnoses via post-mortem examination may be particularly valuable when patients die soon after the biopsy procedure. Furthermore, an autopsy is especially useful when patients die soon after a biopsy in order to determine what role, if any, the procedure played in their deaths. Though biopsy complications are uncommon, a biopsy may still contribute to or precipitate death in a small number of patients.Item Consensus Recommendations for Histological Criteria of Autoimmune Hepatitis from the International AIH Pathology Group(Wiley, 2022-05) Lohse, Ansgar W.; Sebode, Marcial; Bhathal, Prithi S.; Clouston, Andrew D.; Dienes, Hans P.; Jain, Dhanpat; Gouw, Annette S. H.; Guindi, Maha; Kakar, Sanjay; Kleiner, David E.; Krech, Till; Lackner, Carolin; Longerich, Thomas; Saxena, Romil; Terracciano, Luigi; Washington, Kay; Weidemann, Sören; Hübscher, Stefan G.; Tiniakos, Dina; Pathology and Laboratory Medicine, School of MedicineBackground & Aims Diagnostic histological criteria for autoimmune hepatitis (AIH) have not been clearly established. Previously published criteria focused mainly on chronic AIH, in which inflammatory changes mainly occur in portal/periportal regions and may not be applicable to acute presentation of AIH, in which inflammatory changes are typically predominantly lobular in location. International consensus criteria for the diagnosis and assessment of disease severity in both acute and chronic AIH are thus urgently needed. Methods Seventeen expert liver pathologists convened at an international workshop and subsequently used a modified Delphi panel approach to establish consensus criteria for the histopathological diagnosis of AIH. Results The consensus view is that liver biopsy should remain standard for diagnosing AIH. AIH is considered likely, if there is a predominantly portal lymphoplasmacytic hepatitis with more than mild interface activity and/or more than mild lobular hepatitis in the absence of histological features suggestive of another liver disease. AIH is also considered likely if there is predominantly lobular hepatitis with or without centrilobular necroinflammation and at least one of the following features: portal lymphoplasmacytic hepatitis, interface hepatitis or portal-based fibrosis, in the absence of histological features suggestive of another liver disease. Emperipolesis and hepatocellular rosettes are not regarded as being specific for AIH. Conclusions The criteria proposed in this consensus statement provide a uniform approach to the histological diagnosis of AIH, which is relevant for patients with an acute as well as a chronic presentation and to more accurately reflect the current understanding of liver pathology in AIH.Item Distinct histopathological phenotypes of severe alcoholic hepatitis suggest different mechanisms driving liver injury and failure(American Society for Clinical Investigation, 2022) Ma, Jing; Guillot, Adrien; Yang, Zhihong; Mackowiak, Bryan; Hwang, Seonghwan; Park, Ogyi; Peiffer, Brandon J.; Ahmadi, Ali Reza; Melo, Luma; Kusumanchi, Praveen; Huda, Nazmul; Saxena, Romil; He, Yong; Guan, Yukun; Feng, Dechun; Sancho-Bru, Pau; Zang, Mengwei; MacGregor Cameron, Andrew; Bataller, Ramon; Tacke, Frank; Sun, Zhaoli; Liangpunsakul, Suthat; Gao, Bin; Pathology and Laboratory Medicine, School of MedicineIntrahepatic neutrophil infiltration has been implicated in severe alcoholic hepatitis (SAH) pathogenesis; however, the mechanism underlying neutrophil-induced injury in SAH remains obscure. This translational study aims to describe the patterns of intrahepatic neutrophil infiltration and its involvement in SAH pathogenesis. Immunohistochemistry analyses of explanted livers identified two SAH phenotypes despite a similar clinical presentation, one with high intrahepatic neutrophils (Neuhi), but low levels of CD8+ T cells, and vice versa. RNA-Seq analyses demonstrated that neutrophil cytosolic factor 1 (NCF1), a key factor in controlling neutrophilic ROS production, was upregulated and correlated with hepatic inflammation and disease progression. To study specifically the mechanisms related to Neuhi in AH patients and liver injury, we used the mouse model of chronic-plus-binge ethanol feeding and found that myeloid-specific deletion of the Ncf1 gene abolished ethanol-induced hepatic inflammation and steatosis. RNA-Seq analysis and the data from experimental models revealed that neutrophilic NCF1-dependent ROS promoted alcoholic hepatitis (AH) by inhibiting AMP-activated protein kinase (a key regulator of lipid metabolism) and microRNA-223 (a key antiinflammatory and antifibrotic microRNA). In conclusion, two distinct histopathological phenotypes based on liver immune phenotyping are observed in SAH patients, suggesting a separate mechanism driving liver injury and/or failure in these patients.Item Dynamic Alterations to Hepatic MicroRNA-29a in Response to Long-Term High-Fat Diet and EtOH Feeding(MDPI, 2023-09-26) Liang, Tiebing; Kota, Janaiah; Williams, Kent E.; Saxena, Romil; Gawrieh, Samer; Zhong, Xiaoling; Zimmers, Teresa A.; Chalasani, Naga; Surgery, School of MedicineMicroRNA-29a (miR-29a) is a well characterized fibro-inflammatory molecule and its aberrant expression is linked to a variety of pathological liver conditions. The long-term effects of a high-fat diet (HFD) in combination with different levels of EtOH consumption on miR-29a expression and liver pathobiology are unknown. Mice at 8 weeks of age were divided into five groups (calorie-matched diet plus water (CMD) as a control group, HFD plus water (HFD) as a liver disease group, HFD plus 2% EtOH (HFD + 2% E), HFD + 10% E, and HFD + 20% E as intervention groups) and fed for 4, 13, 26, or 39 weeks. At each time point, analyses were performed for liver weight/body weight (BW) ratio, AST/ALT ratio, as well as liver histology assessments, which included inflammation, estimated fat deposition, lipid area, and fibrosis. Hepatic miR-29a was measured and correlations with phenotypic traits were determined. Four-week feeding produced no differences between the groups on all collected phenotypic traits or miR-29a expression, while significant effects were observed after 13 weeks, with EtOH concentration-specific induction of miR-29a. A turning point for most of the collected traits was apparent at 26 weeks, and miR-29a was significantly down-regulated with increasing liver injury. Overall, miR-29a up-regulation was associated with a lower liver/BW ratio, fat deposition, inflammation, and fibrosis, suggesting a protective role of miR-29a against liver disease progression. A HFD plus increasing concentrations of EtOH produces progressive adverse effects on the liver, with no evidence of beneficial effects of low-dose EtOH consumption. Moreover, miR-29a up-regulation is associated with less severe liver injury.Item Effect of different obesogenic diets on pancreatic histology in Ossabaw miniature swine(Wolters Kluwer, 2011-04) Fullenkamp, Allison M.; Bell, Lauren N.; Robbins, Reiesha D.; Lee, Lydia; Saxena, Romil; Alloosh, Mouhamad; Klaunig, James E.; Mirmira, Raghavendra G.; Sturek, Michael; Chalasani, Naga; Department of Medicine, IU School of MedicineOBJECTIVE: Obesity is a factor in the outcome and severity of pancreatic conditions. We examined the effect of hypercaloric diets on the pancreata of Ossabaw swine, a large animal model of metabolic syndrome and obesity. METHODS: Swine were fed with 1 of 4 diets: high-fructose (n = 9), atherogenic (n = 10), modified atherogenic (n = 6), or eucaloric standard diet (n = 12) for 24 weeks. Serum chemistries were measured, and pancreata were examined for histological abnormalities including steatosis, inflammation or fibrosis, insulin content, and oxidative stress. RESULTS: The fructose, atherogenic, and modified atherogenic diet groups exhibited obesity, metabolic syndrome, islet enlargement, and significantly increased pancreatic steatosis (22.9% ± 7.5%, 19.7% ± 7.7%, and 38.7% ± 15.3% fat in total tissue area, respectively) compared with controls (9.3% ± 1.9%; P < 0.05). The modified atherogenic diet group showed significantly increased oxidative stress levels as evidenced by elevated serum malondialdehyde (3.0 ± 3.3 vs 1.5 ± 0.3 μmol/L in controls; P = 0.006) and pancreatic malondialdehyde (0.1 ± 0.12 vs 0.04 ± 0.01 nmol/mg protein in controls; P = 0.01). None of the swine exhibited pancreatitis or cellular injury. CONCLUSIONS: Ossabaw swine fed with a modified atherogenic diet developed significant pancreatic steatosis and increased oxidative stress, but no other histological abnormalities were observed.Item Enhanced Ca2+-channeling complex formation at the ER-mitochondria interface underlies the pathogenesis of alcohol-associated liver disease(Springer Nature, 2023-03-27) Thoudam, Themis; Chanda, Dipanjan; Lee, Jung Yi; Jung, Min-Kyo; Sinam, Ibotombi Singh; Kim, Byung-Gyu; Park, Bo-Yoon; Kwon, Woong Hee; Kim, Hyo-Jeong; Kim, Myeongjin; Lim, Chae Won; Lee, Hoyul; Huh, Yang Hoon; Miller, Caroline A.; Saxena, Romil; Skill, Nicholas J.; Huda, Nazmul; Kusumanchi, Praveen; Ma, Jing; Yang, Zhihong; Kim, Min-Ji; Mun, Ji Young; Harris, Robert A.; Jeon, Jae-Han; Liangpunsakul, Suthat; Lee, In-Kyu; Pathology and Laboratory Medicine, School of MedicineCa2+ overload-induced mitochondrial dysfunction is considered as a major contributing factor in the pathogenesis of alcohol-associated liver disease (ALD). However, the initiating factors that drive mitochondrial Ca2+ accumulation in ALD remain elusive. Here, we demonstrate that an aberrant increase in hepatic GRP75-mediated mitochondria-associated ER membrane (MAM) Ca2+-channeling (MCC) complex formation promotes mitochondrial dysfunction in vitro and in male mouse model of ALD. Unbiased transcriptomic analysis reveals PDK4 as a prominently inducible MAM kinase in ALD. Analysis of human ALD cohorts further corroborate these findings. Additional mass spectrometry analysis unveils GRP75 as a downstream phosphorylation target of PDK4. Conversely, non-phosphorylatable GRP75 mutation or genetic ablation of PDK4 prevents alcohol-induced MCC complex formation and subsequent mitochondrial Ca2+ accumulation and dysfunction. Finally, ectopic induction of MAM formation reverses the protective effect of PDK4 deficiency in alcohol-induced liver injury. Together, our study defines a mediatory role of PDK4 in promoting mitochondrial dysfunction in ALD.Item Evaluation of 11C-Acetate and 18 F-FDG PET/CT in mouse multidrug resistance gene-2 deficient mouse model of hepatocellular carcinoma(BioMed Central, 2015-05) Territo, Paul R.; Maluccio, Mary; Riley, Amanda A.; McCarthy, Brian P.; Fletcher, James; Tann, Mark; Saxena, Romil; Skill, Nicholas J.; Department of Radiology and Imaging, IU School of MedicineBackground Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) remains a global health problem with unique diagnostic and therapeutic challenges, including difficulties in identifying the highest risk patients. Previous work from our lab has established the murine multidrug resistance-2 mouse (MDR2) model of HCC as a reasonable preclinical model that parallels the changes seen in human inflammatory associated HCC. The purpose of this study is to evaluate modalities of PET/CT in MDR2−/− mice in order to facilitate therapeutic translational studies from bench to bedside. Methods 18F-FDG and 11C-acetate PET/CT was performed on 12 m MDR2−/− mice (n = 3/tracer) with HCC and 12 m MDR2−/+ control mice (n = 3/tracer) without HCC. To compare PET/CT to biological markers of HCC and cellular function, serum alpha-fetoprotein (AFP), lysophosphatidic acid (LPA), cAMP and hepatic tumor necrosis factor α (TNFα) were quantified in 3-12 m MDR2−/− (n = 10) mice using commercially available ELISA analysis. To translate results in mice to patients 11C-acetate PET/CT was also performed in 8 patents suspected of HCC recurrence following treatment and currently on the liver transplant wait list. Results Hepatic18F-FDG metabolism was not significantly increased in MDR2−/− mice. In contrast, hepatic 11C-acetate metabolism was significantly elevated in MDR2−/− mice when compared to MDR2−/+ controls. Serum AFP and LPA levels increased in MDR2−/− mice contemporaneous with the emergence of HCC. This was accompanied by a significant decrease in serum cAMP levels and an increase in hepatic TNFα. In patients suspected of HCC recurrence there were 5 true positives, 2 true negatives and 1 suspected false 11C-acetate negative. Conclusions Hepatic 11C-acetate PET/CT tracks well with HCC in MDR2−/− mice and patients with underlying liver disease. Consequently 11C-acetate PET/CT is well suited to study 1) HCC emergence/progression in patients and 2) reduce animal numbers required to study new chemotherapeutics in murine models of HCC.Item Hepatic Arterial Buffer Response: Pathologic Evidence in Non-Cirrhotic Human Liver with Portal Vein Thrombosis(Office of the Vice Chancellor for Research, 2016-04-08) Rush, Natalia; Sun, Hongliu; Nakanishi, Yukihiro; Mneimneh, Wadad; Kwo, Paul Y.; Saxena, RomilHepatic arterial buffer response (HABR) is the ability of the hepatic artery (HA) to compensate for changes in portal flow. Experimentally, occlusion of the portal vein leads to compensatory increase in HA flow with minimal parenchymal effects. Wether portal vein thrombosis (PVT) causes similar effects in the human liver is unknown. This study aims to answer this question as well as elucidate any microscopic features that may reliably assist diagnosis of PVT in the non-cirrhotic liver. We studied patients with PVT and no concomitant liver pathology. Age and gender matched livers with normal morphology served as controls. Following parameters were graded as subtle or obvious and focal or diffuse in a blinded fashion: sinusoidal dilatation, central and portal vein (PV) dilatation, PV absence, hepatic plate thinning and thickening. Outer and luminal diameters and wall thickness of HA, and outer diameter of accompanying bile ducts (BD) were measured. There were 16 patients (8 men, 8 women; mean age, 46.5 years) who presented with varices (12), ascites (8) and splenomegaly (11). Subtle and or focal dilatations of CV, PV and sinusoids as well as thinning/thickening of hepatic plates were common findings in both groups but were diffuse and obvious predominantly in cases of PVT. Absence or attenuation of PV was seen only in cases of PVT. The large HA were dilated in resection specimens of patients with PVT, p<0.05. This difference was not seen in biopsy specimens. There was no difference in the small HA in either biopsy or resection specimens or other measurements of HA or BD. In conclusion, septal branches of the HA dilate as a compensatory response to long standing thrombosis. Microscopic features of PVT are subtle but when obvious and/or diffuse in a patient with non-cirrhotic portal hypertension should raise suspicion for this diagnosis.