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The damage-associated molecular pattern HMGB1 is released early after clinical hepatic ischemia/reperfusion.

Accepted version
Peer-reviewed

Type

Article

Change log

Authors

van Golen, Rowan F 
Reiniers, Megan J 
Marsman, Gerben 
Alles, Lindy K 
van Rooyen, Derrick M 

Abstract

OBJECTIVE AND BACKGROUND: Activation of sterile inflammation after hepatic ischemia/reperfusion (I/R) culminates in liver injury. The route to liver damage starts with mitochondrial oxidative stress and cell death during early reperfusion. The link between mitochondrial oxidative stress, damage-associate molecular pattern (DAMP) release, and sterile immune signaling is incompletely understood and lacks clinical validation. The aim of the study was to validate this relation in a clinical liver I/R cohort and to limit DAMP release using a mitochondria-targeted antioxidant in I/R-subjected mice. METHODS: Plasma levels of the DAMPs high-mobility group box 1 (HMGB1), mitochondrial DNA, and nucleosomes were measured in 39 patients enrolled in an observational study who underwent a major liver resection with (N = 29) or without (N = 13) intraoperative liver ischemia. Circulating cytokine and neutrophil activation markers were also determined. In mice, the mitochondria-targeted antioxidant MitoQ was intravenously infused in an attempt to limit DAMP release, reduce sterile inflammation, and suppress I/R injury. RESULTS: In patients, HMGB1 was elevated following liver resection with I/R compared to liver resection without I/R. HMGB1 levels correlated positively with ischemia duration and peak post-operative transaminase (ALT) levels. There were no differences in mitochondrial DNA, nucleosome, or cytokine levels between the two groups. In mice, MitoQ neutralized hepatic oxidative stress and decreased HMGB1 release by ±50%. MitoQ suppressed transaminase release, hepatocellular necrosis, and cytokine production. Reconstituting disulfide HMGB1 during reperfusion reversed these protective effects. CONCLUSION: HMGB1 seems the most pertinent DAMP in clinical hepatic I/R injury. Neutralizing mitochondrial oxidative stress may limit DAMP release after hepatic I/R and reduce liver damage.

Description

Keywords

Antioxidants, Damage-associated molecular patterns, Intravital microscopy, Liver resection, Mitochondrial DNA, Sterile inflammation, Aged, Alarmins, Antioxidants, Cytokines, DNA, Mitochondrial, Female, HMGB1 Protein, Humans, Liver, Male, Middle Aged, Mitochondria, Organophosphorus Compounds, Oxidative Stress, Reperfusion Injury, Ubiquinone

Journal Title

Biochim Biophys Acta Mol Basis Dis

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

0925-4439
1879-260X

Volume Title

1865

Publisher

Elsevier BV
Sponsorship
Medical Research Council (MC_UU_00015/3)
Wellcome Trust (110159/Z/15/Z)