Phenotypic modulation of perisinusoidal cells following acute liver injury: a quantitative analysis
- PMID: 1493105
- PMCID: PMC2002430
Phenotypic modulation of perisinusoidal cells following acute liver injury: a quantitative analysis
Abstract
Expression of the alpha-(smooth muscle) isoform of actin (alpha-SMA) by non-parenchymal cells in rat liver was studied following induction of acute liver injury using a single sublethal dose of carbon tetrachloride (CCl4). In normal liver, alpha-SMA immunoreactivity was identified in the smooth muscle cells of hepatic arteries and in the walls of portal and hepatic vein branches. Occasional alpha-SMA-containing stellate shaped cells were found in acinar zone 3 but most perisinusoidal cells (PSCs) did not express this protein. In CCl4-treated animals, there was an increase in the number of immunoreactive cells in perivenular zones, reaching a peak at day 3 following exposure to the toxin. These cells were morphologically identical to desmin-positive PSCs and the kinetics of the responses of alpha-SMA-positive and desmin-positive cells were similar. In en face labelling experiments, evidence of co-expression of alpha-SMA and desmin by non-parenchymal cells was obtained, although some desmin-positive PSCs did not appear to express alpha-SMA. These results suggest that PSCs rapidly undergo phenotypic modulation in response to acute liver injury with acquisition of alpha-SMA expression. It is proposed that these phenotypic changes coincide with functional alterations, such activated 'myofibroblast-like' cells being responsible for the enhanced matrix protein synthesis necessary for tissue repair.
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