The involvement of parenchymal, Kupffer and endothelial liver cells in the hepatic uptake of intravenously injected liposomes. Effects of lanthanum and gadolinium salts
- PMID: 7295792
- DOI: 10.1016/0304-4165(81)90148-3
The involvement of parenchymal, Kupffer and endothelial liver cells in the hepatic uptake of intravenously injected liposomes. Effects of lanthanum and gadolinium salts
Abstract
125I-labeled albumin or poly(vinyl pyrrolidone) encapsulated in intermediate size multilamellar or unilamellar liposomes with 30-40% of cholesterol were injected intravenously into rats. In other experiments liposomes containing phosphatidyl[Me-14C]choline was injected. 1 h after injection parenchymal or non-parenchymal cells were isolated. Non-parenchymal cells were separated by elutriation centrifugation into a Kupffer cell fraction and an endothelial cell fraction. From the measurements of radioactivities in the various cell fractions it was concluded that the liposomes are almost exclusively taken up by the Kupffer cells. Endothelial cells did not contribute at all and hepatocytes only to a very low extent to total hepatic uptake of the 125I-labels. Of the 14C-label, which orginates from the phosphatidylcholine moiety of the liposomes, much larger proportions were recovered in the hepatocytes. A time-dependence study suggested that besides the involvement of phosphatidylcholine exchange between liposomes and high density lipoprotein, a process of intercellular transfer of lipid label from Kupffer cells to the hepatocytes may be involved in this phenomenon. Lanthanum or gadolinium salts, which effectively block Kupffer cell activity, failed to accomplish an increase in the fraction of liposomal material recovered in the parenchymal cells. This is compatible with the notion that liposomes of the type used in these experiments have no, or at most very limited, access to the liver parenchyma following their intravenous administration to rats.
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