Liver Research Facility/Department of Abdominal Transplant Surgery, University Hospitals Leuven, Leuven, Belgium.
Liver Transpl. 2012 Feb;18(2):206-18. doi: 10.1002/lt.22446.
Livers exposed to warm ischemia (WI) before transplantation are at risk for primary nonfunction (PNF), graft dysfunction, and ischemic biliary strictures, all associated with ischemia/reperfusion injury (IRI). Our multifactorial approach, Leuven drug protocol (LDP), has been shown to reduce these effects and increase recipient survival in WI/IRI-damaged porcine liver transplantation. The aim was the identification of the molecular mechanisms responsible for the hepatoprotective effects of the LDP. Porcine livers were exposed to 45 minutes of WI, cold-stored for 4 hours, transplanted, and either modulated (LDP group; n = 3) or not modulated (control group; n = 4). In the LDP group, the donor livers were flushed with streptokinase and epoprostenol before cold perfusion; the recipients received intravenous glycine, a-1-acid-glycoprotein, FR167653 (a mitogen-activated protein kinase inhibitor), a-tocopherol, glutathione, and apotransferrin. Liver samples were taken before WI and 1 hour after reperfusion. Gene expression was determined with microarrays and molecular pathways and key regulatory genes were identified. The number of genes changed between baseline and 1 hour after reperfusion was 686 in the LDP group and 325 in the control group. The extra genes in the LDP group belonged predominantly to pathways related to cytokine activity, apoptosis, and cell proliferation. We identified 7 genes that were suppressed in the LDP group. These genes could be linked in part to the administered drugs. New potential drug targets were identified on the basis of genes induced in the control group but unaffected in the LDP group and interactions predicted by the literature. In conclusion, the LDP primarily resulted in the suppression of inflammation-regulating genes in IRI. Furthermore, the microarray technique helped us to identify additional gene targets.
肝脏在移植前经历热缺血(WI)会增加原发性无功能(PNF)、移植物功能障碍和缺血性胆管狭窄的风险,这些都与缺血/再灌注损伤(IRI)有关。我们的多因素方法,Leuven 药物方案(LDP),已被证明可以减轻这些影响,并增加 WI/IRI 损伤猪肝移植受体的存活率。目的是确定 LDP 对肝脏具有保护作用的分子机制。将猪的肝脏暴露于 45 分钟的 WI 中,冷储存 4 小时,然后进行移植,并对其进行调制(LDP 组;n = 3)或不进行调制(对照组;n = 4)。在 LDP 组中,供体肝脏在冷灌注前用链激酶和依前列醇冲洗;受者接受静脉内甘氨酸、a-1-酸性糖蛋白、FR167653(丝裂原激活蛋白激酶抑制剂)、α-生育酚、谷胱甘肽和转铁蛋白。在 WI 前和再灌注后 1 小时采集肝脏样本。用微阵列测定基因表达,并确定分子途径和关键调节基因。在 LDP 组和对照组中,与基线相比,再灌注后 1 小时基因变化的数量分别为 686 个和 325 个。LDP 组中额外的基因主要属于与细胞因子活性、细胞凋亡和细胞增殖相关的途径。我们发现 LDP 组中有 7 个基因被抑制。这些基因可能与给予的药物部分相关。基于在对照组中诱导的基因而在 LDP 组中不受影响的基因,并根据文献预测的相互作用,确定了新的潜在药物靶点。总之,LDP 主要导致 IRI 中炎症调节基因的抑制。此外,微阵列技术帮助我们确定了其他基因靶点。